Citroën BX – XPO – Mi16 Engine Assembly and Cambelt
With the head and bottom end restored, I could finally complete the MI16 engine assembly. But it wasn't going to go completely smoothly!
With the head and bottom end restored, I could finally complete the MI16 engine assembly. But it wasn't going to go completely smoothly!
After the disaster of fitting piston rings last time, will new rings go on any easier? Will this bottom end ever get rebuilt?
A month since building the cylinder, I had to get on with building the bottom end. A few parts to clean and put together. How hard can it be?
In March I found a crank journal measuring undersize, creating quite a quandary. I'll try to share my learning, ups, and downs, with you.
The XPO project came with a donor engine and a folder of history. Lets have a look through the engine history and see what we can learn.
With all the cylinder head parts cleaned and camshafts polished, I could begin the therapeutic process of building the cylinder head.
Having previously overhauled the cylinder head, it was time to prepare the rest of the parts and start putting the engine back together.
Having found a leaking piston ring, it was time to go all in on this XU9J4 engine and teardown the bottom end. What disasters await?
Can I find the reason for the leaking pressure we previously found? Can the leak be fixed with a cylinder head overhaul?
The running engine has arrived up with ~25 BHP missing. Can I find the missing ponies with some cylinder head leak testing alone?
While cleaning the engine I started to strip the ancillaries and found a multitude of poor engineering practices, and 10mm sockets!
Perhaps not a conventional start, my first task on this restoration is the removal of the engine so I can work on it in the warm garage.
Poor idle has been hounding me for over 6 months, could the solution be so simple?