The suggestions about having the pressure checked manually under the hood is excellent advice. My thought is that if the oil pressure gauge shows high when the car is cold, and little to nothing when it is warm and at idle, it may be doing its job. That job is to tell you that the engine is worn and needs to be rebuilt. As bearings for the cam, crank and connecting rods wear, the clearances increase resulting in a decrease in oil pressure. When the oil is cold, it is thick and would read high, but at operating temperature, it will drop significantly, with little to nothing at idle. The post about hearing lifter noise first when warm, at idle, and after a little bit of time has past is quite correct. Serious low oil pressure starves the lifters and they usually protest the most.
This type of bearing wear can happen prematurely as a result of continuous prolonged pre-ignition or spark knocking, caused by incorrect ignition timing and today's low octane fuels. That causes the most stress on the rod bearings, but will effect the crank shaft bearings in the longer term as well. I also should be remembered that even under the best of circumstances, engines wear out. A 1968 440 should be fine in this respect for around 200,000 miles with normal wear and tear. Considering the cars age, this could be the case.
Check the pressure manually under the hood. It should read between 10 to 20 pounds at idle to be safe, but any is better than none. At least you will know the truth. Even with 5, I wouldn't be too concerned as long as the car is tuned properly for today's fuel and meticulously maintained. If you start hearing the lifters clattering you will know the rebuild is overdue.
Paul W. -----Original Message----- From: Steve B. <Imperial59@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Sat, 14 Jul 2007 6:51 pm Subject: Re: IML: Should I believe the gauge?
> past couple of months, >the oil pressure gauge in my '68 LeBaron drops to > nothing after the engine is warm and I stop >for a light or at idle.Aloha,I'm trying to decide whether to worry about something or not. For the
Replace the sender first. If the pressure still reads low connect a manual gauge and see what the pressure really is. You may find that there are two senders under there... one for the sentry and one for the gauge. You can pull the wire off one at a time to figure out which is which.
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