nadthomas
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2017
- Posts
- 158
- Reaction score
- 178
I'm really hoping that someone schools me on something that I have overlooked. Over the summer I pulled the motor out of my Denali to give it a little refresh since I'm approaching 200k miles. I replaced a bunch of seals like valve covers, timing cover, rear covers, rear main, front seal, intake gaskets. I also fixed the broken exhaust bolts, and put on new exhaust manifolds and gaskets. While I had the engine out and partially apart, I decided to replace the oil pump and the pickup tube. Prior to engine removal, from what I recall, and have read, I believe oil pressure was generally fine. 45PSI at start up and while driving, pressure would drop at idle after it was warmed up to about 30ish psi, but then would come right back up while I was driving.
The motor was out of the Denali for about 4-5 months while I did this work, and I did not touch the heads, cams, crank, timing or any of the bearings while it was out. Some how my TCM went bad during all of this, so the first startup was at my friends shop after the diagnosed the electrical issue that was causing the no start. They immediately noticed low oil pressure at the first start up. While cold at idle pressure never got beyond 20-25psi, and dropped below 10psi after a couple of minutes. They hooked up a mechanical gauge, as well as a new oil pressure sensor and got the same results. So, the dash gauge appears to be accurate
So, I had it towed back home, assuming that the new oil pump was bad, or that maybe I damaged the pickup tube o-ring. So, I pulled things appear again, so I could easily pull the timing cover and oil pump. Pulled the pump, and found no damage to the pickup tube o-ring. So I figured the new pump was bad. So, I double downed and upgraded to from the Melling M365 oil pump, to the Melling 10355 which is the High Volume/High Pressure version of the pump. I swapped out the high pressure spring as to the slightly lower pressure one, as I read the higher pressure spring will produce 65-70psi, and the lower pressure spring should be about 8-10psi lower. Still well above stock. I also replaced the pickup tube o-ring again, even though it was new. So, I just got things back together enough to test the new-new pump, and I am still only getting about 20-25psi on cold start up. I don't have the water pump hooked up, so I killed it after less then a minute. It also looked like oil pressure was already starting to drop a little. I followed Melling install instructions shimming out the pump gears during install, and this time I pulled the oil galley plug and added about a 1/2 quart of oil through the plug to prime the oil pump.
What am I doing wrong, or what have I over looked. I don't understand how I could go instantly from a vehicle with decent oil pressure to now poor oil pressure given the work I have done.
The motor was out of the Denali for about 4-5 months while I did this work, and I did not touch the heads, cams, crank, timing or any of the bearings while it was out. Some how my TCM went bad during all of this, so the first startup was at my friends shop after the diagnosed the electrical issue that was causing the no start. They immediately noticed low oil pressure at the first start up. While cold at idle pressure never got beyond 20-25psi, and dropped below 10psi after a couple of minutes. They hooked up a mechanical gauge, as well as a new oil pressure sensor and got the same results. So, the dash gauge appears to be accurate
So, I had it towed back home, assuming that the new oil pump was bad, or that maybe I damaged the pickup tube o-ring. So, I pulled things appear again, so I could easily pull the timing cover and oil pump. Pulled the pump, and found no damage to the pickup tube o-ring. So I figured the new pump was bad. So, I double downed and upgraded to from the Melling M365 oil pump, to the Melling 10355 which is the High Volume/High Pressure version of the pump. I swapped out the high pressure spring as to the slightly lower pressure one, as I read the higher pressure spring will produce 65-70psi, and the lower pressure spring should be about 8-10psi lower. Still well above stock. I also replaced the pickup tube o-ring again, even though it was new. So, I just got things back together enough to test the new-new pump, and I am still only getting about 20-25psi on cold start up. I don't have the water pump hooked up, so I killed it after less then a minute. It also looked like oil pressure was already starting to drop a little. I followed Melling install instructions shimming out the pump gears during install, and this time I pulled the oil galley plug and added about a 1/2 quart of oil through the plug to prime the oil pump.
What am I doing wrong, or what have I over looked. I don't understand how I could go instantly from a vehicle with decent oil pressure to now poor oil pressure given the work I have done.