North American Turbocoupe Organization



Cam Bearings..
Kuch Offline
Senior Member
#1
I am about to take my home ported head over to the machine shop for decking, hardened seats, and cut for bigger valves. I was looking at those replacement cam bearings which feed oil to the upper half of the bearing instead of from the bottom. Was thinking of replacing them myself, has anyone replaced the 2.3 cam bearings themselves? I tried tapping the old ones out with a brass punch, but they didn't seem to move at all. Thoughts? Thanks
1988 Turbo Coupe, Black/Black, 5 Speed, Moonroof,  T3/T4, ported E6, 255LPH, Kirban, Stinger Exhaust, MGW shifter, K&N, Gillis valve, BP1.5, PIMPx, Koni's
1964 Ford Galaxie 500XL, 390 6V, Big Solid cam, Headers,3.89's, 4 Speed, Vast and fast
1960 Ford Starliner, 292 Y Block, 312 4bbl intake, headers, 3 Speed, slow and low
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anasazi4st Offline
Senior Member
#2
(12-09-2020, 08:45 PM)Kuch Wrote: I am about to take my home ported head over to the machine shop for decking, hardened seats, and cut for bigger valves. I was looking at those replacement cam bearings which feed oil to the upper half of the bearing instead of from the bottom. Was thinking of replacing them myself, has anyone replaced the 2.3 cam bearings themselves? I tried tapping the old ones out with a brass punch, but they didn't seem to move at all. Thoughts? Thanks

I’ve been looking at rebuilding an engine myself—got most everything, just need to find some affordable oversized pistons—but from what I’ve read, it’s not recommended that you attempt the bearings removal yourself.

Others might have personal experience with this. My thought is, have the machine shop do it.
Another proud dues-paying member.

1987 Turbo Coupe w/T5OD, 8.8 axle, grey smoke; most options. Got it in 1991 with 41K miles: 3 turbos, 2 heater cores, 3 T5OD full rebuilds, 6 clutches, 1 head gasket, 2 Teves II ABS units, etc. later....
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Jeff K Offline
Administrator
#3
^^^ Agree 100%

If not done correctly you risk bending the cam towers. Even a very very slight bend in the cam towers will result in the cam not rotating freely damaging both the cam and the new bearings.
Jeff Korn

88 Turbo Coupe: Intake and exhaust mods, T3 turbo at 24 psi, forced air IC, water injection, BPV, Ranger cam, subframes, etc., etc.
86 Tbird 5.0 (original owner): intake, exhaust, valvetrain mods, 100 HP N2O, ignition, gears, suspension, etc., etc.
11 Crown Vic Interceptor
14 Toyota Camry (wifes car)
95 Taurus GL Vulcan winter beater
67 Honda 450 Super Sport - completely customized
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Kuch Offline
Senior Member
#4
Thanks for the replies, I will take the advice and have my machine shop do them.
1988 Turbo Coupe, Black/Black, 5 Speed, Moonroof,  T3/T4, ported E6, 255LPH, Kirban, Stinger Exhaust, MGW shifter, K&N, Gillis valve, BP1.5, PIMPx, Koni's
1964 Ford Galaxie 500XL, 390 6V, Big Solid cam, Headers,3.89's, 4 Speed, Vast and fast
1960 Ford Starliner, 292 Y Block, 312 4bbl intake, headers, 3 Speed, slow and low
Reply





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