Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 3,005 Threads: 168
Reputation:
37
Location: Sherwood Forest
Car type: 1938 Talbot Ten Airline
Many an engine has been removed and refitted single-handed by the roadside. As Steve says, they were lighter in those days!
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 3,392 Threads: 106
Reputation:
28
Location: Darkest Bedfordshire
RPM - yes, I think so. I lower it in with the gearbox end pointing slightly down so as to get under the bulkhead, handbrake is off so you can bring the car up to meet it. I spread a bit of newspaper around to limit paint scratching. You reach a point where the rear of the block is up against the bulkhead and the front of the sump is on the spring u-bolts. I then sling a bit of rope around the gearbox flange so it can be pulled up at that end and it 'rotates' into position. Like I said, car by car this may vary - it's quite tight.
It's also possible to replace / remove a deep sump in situ - just need to loosen engine fix bolts (mine are never tight anyway) and lift the front of the engine a fraction, then it will slide in. It's easier to make a satisfactory 'goo' joint out of the car though, hence the above.
Joined: Jan 2019 Posts: 1,567 Threads: 20
Reputation:
14
Location: Bala North Wales
Car type: 1933 RP Standard Saloon
Once up a time, when I was young and fit, I used to take engines out on my own quite happily. Nowadays, I find that the services of a well built grandson-in-law is a most useful adjunct. As has been mentioned earlier in this thread, it is not so much the weight, even with the gearbox attached, but the fact that all the furniture in the engine bay, from the front of the chassis to the throttle control rod, seems to get in the way!