The Warden
MiB Impersonator
Hello!
I was reading the thread about lbzbuick's truck with a windowed block and it reminded me of a receipt I had once seen in my truck's records about some major engine work. I had thought that the work was done due to a swallowed valve, so I decided to go through the records...and lo and behold, I had remembered it wrong.
This dates back to when my uncle's step-father still had the truck...but, based on the receipt, in 1991 he took the truck to Gaudin Ford in Lost Wages complaining about an engine knock. It looks like three glow plug tips had broken off in the cylinders...the end result was, they had to replace all three of the affected pistons, three exhaust valves, two intake valves, the rocker arms for those three (looks like they went ahead and did all 8 rocker arm assemblies, which would explain why the truck has the 7.3l style rockers), and related parts...the total came out to $1130 (which would be $1888 today)
$550 for labor (11 hours at $50/hour, which seems cheap by current-day standards) and $546 in parts.
After seeing some of the carnage from dropped glow plug tips, I'd say that my uncle's step-father got lucky, but even still...it's a good reminder of why you need to be careful about what brand of glow plugs are used and to be especially careful when removing them
I was reading the thread about lbzbuick's truck with a windowed block and it reminded me of a receipt I had once seen in my truck's records about some major engine work. I had thought that the work was done due to a swallowed valve, so I decided to go through the records...and lo and behold, I had remembered it wrong.
This dates back to when my uncle's step-father still had the truck...but, based on the receipt, in 1991 he took the truck to Gaudin Ford in Lost Wages complaining about an engine knock. It looks like three glow plug tips had broken off in the cylinders...the end result was, they had to replace all three of the affected pistons, three exhaust valves, two intake valves, the rocker arms for those three (looks like they went ahead and did all 8 rocker arm assemblies, which would explain why the truck has the 7.3l style rockers), and related parts...the total came out to $1130 (which would be $1888 today)
$550 for labor (11 hours at $50/hour, which seems cheap by current-day standards) and $546 in parts.After seeing some of the carnage from dropped glow plug tips, I'd say that my uncle's step-father got lucky, but even still...it's a good reminder of why you need to be careful about what brand of glow plugs are used and to be especially careful when removing them

). With that said, I don't know what the going rate for labor was in 1991...was that on par, or was that below the standards even then?