Hey all,
It is broke and I have to fix it.
Someone was a moron (me) when trading off an old blue truck in exchange for a big green van (also old). The trading wasn't what made the moron, it was not checking to see if the big green van (Oscar) had antifreeze in the cooling system before November.
It's a small block chevy (305, TBI, not that it matters) in a '92 OscarVan.
So...I've got a popped out "freeze plug" and maybe (who knows) no catastrophic metal rupture on the block.
The problem is, the plug that popped is the one that's behind the engine mount on the passenger side of the van. That means, even after I get the engine tilted over enough to get access to the hole-where-the-plug-once-was, I'll have no straight-line whacking room with which to drive in another plug.
The first thing that comes to mind is, "Just put in a block heater" because they slide in the core hole, expand/tighten with a wrench and would solve the problem. This what the factory does for the block heater option (I've seen it, have one of the heaters that I could use). They take the expansion plug out of the block and install a heater like I've described above.
The next thought is "I don't need a block heater, surely there's a plug that can slide in and tighten down that doesn't have a heater element in it."
So...I bet someone here has BTDT and can tell me what product to use in just such a situation (and I can almost name who might reply...I love this board...but I won't
).
So...what should I do?
Thanks!
Clem
