• Welcome to The Truck Stop! We see you haven't REGISTERED yet.

    Your truck knowledge is missing!
    • Registration is FREE , all we need is your birthday and email. (We don't share ANY data with ANYONE)
    • We have tons of knowledge here for your diesel truck!
    • Post your own topics and reply to existing threads to help others out!
    • NO ADS! The site is fully functional and ad free!
    CLICK HERE TO REGISTER!

    Problems registering? Click here to contact us!

    Already registered, but need a PASSWORD RESET? CLICK HERE TO RESET YOUR PASSWORD!

Knock at idle

WarWagon

Well it hits on 7 of 8...
Messages
10,947
Reaction score
9,185
Location
AZ
Now what?!
At a hot idle the 1993 'patch' has a loud knock. (As in Dad with hard of hearing issues can hear it.) It goes away completely when I raise the RPM. It will also knock under light throttle. Again going away with heavier throttle.

Dad thinks it's an injector. 30K on Bosch nozzles with 2 stroke in the fuel is not likely IMO. Esp when the knock goes away with more fuel added.

I didn't see anything major on a visual of the HB and belt drive.
 
Crack the injector lines open at idle one by one and see if you can isolate the sound. Sounds like an injector to me.
 
Can't hardly get an ear on it as it comes and goes so much. Caught it today in drive at a stop. The converter rock guard is the loudest - not in oil pan or on injectors I can reach. Do hear some noise on the intake. Thought it was the Dmax fan that started rubbing on the shroud so swapped it to the smaller diameter steel fan. No change.

 
Found it and don't have to swap the flex plate.

Bolt backed out.

DSCN3356.JPG

DSCN3358.JPG

Gonna get a better solution. I'll regret it later, but, later is the key here. Tempted to use red...

DSCN3360.JPG
 
  • Like
Reactions: NVW
Why are you going to regret it later. It will be hard to finger out once you break it loose? Or it might want to strip the head since they are short headed? Those are types of bolts that add time to my projects because I like to clean them up and remove all contamination from threads and prep so they go back in easy as possible under the truck.

Just use a little bit of Loctite and it won't be as strong but will probably do the trick (smaller drop/dot farther up the bolt towards the wrench head so it doesn't cover many threads). Putting too much on small bolts is usually the problem if you are worried about getting them out. Could also go with Green?, the lighter stuff. Oops on edit the low strength is purple. Green Loctite is penetrating.

As a side note....
Not too long ago I buggered a Mazda bolt that was tight. It was a flange bolt with factory rounded ish corners on the hex. I had used a twelve point socket. I have never done that before. Might have been a cheap socket that had worn but it was suppose to be the right size. I took that whole set of sockets out of my go to drawer and have them in a junk tool box set now. I bought a new set of 6 point sockets to replace them. Lesson learned on any bolt that is not a good looking regular bolt/nut use only 6 point good socket and take extra care. Might want to use 6 point wrenches for those bolts at least to break them loose when time to take them out.
 
Last edited:
Like Ferm, I ALWAYS use blue loctite on flywheel to TC bolts.
32 lbs torque on those guys.

Military/ AM General manual tells you one one time use. I almost always reuse them. But they say that with a lot of stuff, like every lock washer. IMO Replace all of yours now. The shearing force from the slight impacting to them on every revolution... Irritating to go get them, and the $15 vs if they let go.
 
I just take the engine or trans out often so I never noted the need before and that is why I worried about threadlocker on them. They had new bolts from Yank for the install. On the lighter side the crossover bolts have their annual anti seize treatment...
 
Back
Top