ICONIC Jeep 4.0L Inline 6 Engine is VERY Broken! Intentional? Neglect? Ill-Repair? I Am IMPRESSED!

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  • Опубликовано: 27 дек 2024

Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @buffmaster0001
    @buffmaster0001 2 года назад +478

    "Can't start in the back. That's how you get an infection." I laughed WAY too hard on that one!

    • @dbsranchr
      @dbsranchr 2 года назад +2

      What video is this referencing? I’m waaayy behind lol.

    • @205rider8
      @205rider8 2 года назад

      @@dbsranchr s*x

    • @dbsranchr
      @dbsranchr 2 года назад +21

      @@205rider8 oh shit…… I’m such a dumbass 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @billholder9665
      @billholder9665 2 года назад +2

      @@dbsranchr took me a minute... not gonna lie.

    • @saltwater8915
      @saltwater8915 2 года назад +10

      Yeah i had to stop, go back and replay ... it's a good thing this channel doesn't have many young viewers "Daddy why do you get an infection if you start in the back"

  • @twisted2291
    @twisted2291 2 года назад +307

    Just did a 2004 XJ with a 4.0. It had two pistons that dropped their skirts. 279,000 miles. The customer replaced it with a reman. This is a common issue with the High Mileage 4.0s. What happens is as follows. It starts to overheat or run just a bit on the higher side of 220 degrees. The piston skirts crack or break off leading to it burning some oil. The oil soot covers the 02 sensor, and tricks it into thinks it is running rich. So the computer adds timing and lean out the fuel to get it within spec. Only to melt down the already damaged piston, and this is the end result.

    • @xinx-fn8973
      @xinx-fn8973 2 года назад +27

      So it killed itself essentially

    • @jordantomblin2302
      @jordantomblin2302 2 года назад +8

      So, technically speaking, the pre-Chrysler style injection might not have made something like this happen?

    • @benjaminwayneb
      @benjaminwayneb 2 года назад +35

      A coated O2 sensor will produce a lower than normal voltage which makes the vehicle think it's running lean, the computer will add fuel so the vehicle will be running rich, not lean.

    • @tarungonneea4614
      @tarungonneea4614 2 года назад +26

      Are you outside of the us? I thought the last model year of the Xj Cherokee in North America(except for Mexico) was 2001.

    • @kainhall
      @kainhall 2 года назад +16

      thats good to know..... when it got around 110F in NE montana this summer..... my 97 was running at about 217 (used OBD2 scanner)
      which is just a needle over straight up and down
      .
      she hit 227 pulling up "kittleson hill" on my 100 mile daily commute
      .
      no noises, oil burning, or death yet..... but i was REALLY worried about it
      turned off the AC, ran the heater.......knowing that number 6 was probably WAY over 227.....
      .
      i love my Heep..... its a POS.... but its got soul

  • @cacline72
    @cacline72 2 года назад +249

    Finally a 4.0 teardown! And my god I've never seen that damage to a 4.0 in my life. I daily a 1995 Jeep Cherokee with 254K on it and it runs pretty nicely.

    • @mikethundercloud8097
      @mikethundercloud8097 2 года назад +1

      we have perished already

    • @Jihadbearzwithgunz
      @Jihadbearzwithgunz 2 года назад +12

      When I was a teen my mom had an 1987 AMC jeep Cherokee with the 4.0 and it had over 300k on it the trans had been rebuilt but motor was unopened besides remain seal and valve covers along with intake and exhaust manifold being redone. Thing was reliable only issue we ever had with it was a upper radiator hose blowing while we're were on the road used a knife cut the bad section out put water in it till we got home and it was good.

    • @vasilivladivostok1136
      @vasilivladivostok1136 2 года назад +8

      behold, a god that bled

    • @DJDinaggio
      @DJDinaggio 2 года назад +1

      It had to be neglect. I sold my '92 XJ six years ago with 260k miles on the odometer and it still ran like a raped ape.

    • @robertreichel1984
      @robertreichel1984 2 года назад +2

      So, so much like a slant six. Wow

  • @austyndrums1993
    @austyndrums1993 Год назад +83

    Fun fact. This engine was designed by engineers from all the big three makes. AMC came around and they stuck this in about everything. When AMC disbanded Chrysler kept using the engine. It has one of the longest production life spans of any engine.

    • @BeepBeepParkie
      @BeepBeepParkie Год назад +17

      It's based on the 258/ 4.2 l, you can use the crank and rods out of that to make a 4.5 l stroker in a 4.0l block

    • @Anatoli50
      @Anatoli50 Год назад +18

      @@BeepBeepParkieMore Fun: the AMC 6 began life as a Nash motor in the late 1940’s. The 7 main bearing bottom end is what gave it legendary durability.

    • @BobCummins
      @BobCummins Год назад +7

      @@BeepBeepParkie, I did not know that. I wondered what the stroker was built out of. Thank you.

    • @danielhertzig9085
      @danielhertzig9085 10 месяцев назад +3

      American Motors loved this engine!

  • @rb89509
    @rb89509 2 года назад +21

    I have a 2001 XJ and it has been rattling for eight years, so bad I tell people that it's a Cummins swap. I paid a mechanic to drop the oil pan and take a peek. He couldn't find any loose so he buttoned it up and said to just ignore the rattle and keep driving it. That was eight years ago.

    • @litz13
      @litz13 2 года назад +6

      Good chance that rattle is the exhaust manifold. When they crack (and they all crack), it'll rattle like a diesel.

    • @revolutionday1
      @revolutionday1 2 года назад

      Rocker arms

    • @Batalia122
      @Batalia122 3 месяца назад

      Flex plate issue. They Crack and starts to tick.

  • @dman1597
    @dman1597 26 дней назад +1

    just rebuilt mine for a second time, got 60,000+ miles out of that and now has just under 350,000 miles. love this motor!!

  • @robinbaass1825
    @robinbaass1825 2 года назад +71

    Good to see an uncomplicated old style basic engine that anyone could work on without a shop full of electronic gadgetry and specialist tools..

    • @grampabadger
      @grampabadger Год назад +4

      Not too unlike the old Chevy 232 inline 6. I never liked the timing gears on those, though.

    • @Star_Gazing_Coffee_Lover
      @Star_Gazing_Coffee_Lover Год назад +2

      Wish is was still like that.

  • @ATLOffroad
    @ATLOffroad Год назад +33

    I owned a 97 Cherokee with the 4.0L. After 212k miles the engine still ran strong. Like you said, everything around the body was falling apart or broken, but the engine always started up.

    • @Jcsthird
      @Jcsthird Год назад +4

      I had a 1996. Great drivetrain but the rest of the Chrysler stuff will fall apart around it.

  • @Mr.EricMBlack
    @Mr.EricMBlack 2 года назад +17

    Got a 2001 Cherokee with 263,000 miles original motor daily driver rig. Impressive to see what abuse these motors can take til they let go.

  • @shauncollins2017
    @shauncollins2017 2 года назад +15

    I bought a 1996 Grand Cherokee with 267,000 miles on it. It was my first Jeep. It had a slight tapping coming from Cylinder #6. Started using T4 10/40 in it and it quieted it substantially. Drove it till about 301,000 miles and then it developed a really loud chatter. Still drove it another 2,000 miles that way till I finally bought another vehicle. I got curious and dropped the oil pan. The piston skirt for cylinder #6 was laying in the pan. Engine still ran and had good compression. Just piston #6 was chattering around in the cylinder.

  • @Dis-Emboweled
    @Dis-Emboweled 2 года назад +30

    The 4.0 "AMC" and Furrrrd's 4.9 300 straight 6 are both legendary in similar ways. I had a '81 Bronco with the 300 and a manual 3-speed ( with overdrive) that was one of my favorite trucks ever! 300,000 miles on that truck. Too many things went wrong too quickly on the Bronco so I sold it as a parts truck. The 4x4 still got me anywhere I needed to the very end. 🏁

    • @ratdude747
      @ratdude747 2 года назад +9

      I daily a 1984 F150 with a 300... very durable engine indeed. Rebuilt it back in 2020 due to bad rings/bores (lots of blowby); despite that, it was still running somewhat decently. The rebuild was its reward for getting me though a long trip I didn't expect to drive it on... well earned!

    • @ojbarberena7090
      @ojbarberena7090 2 года назад +6

      That Ford 4.9 is a great engine.

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull 2 года назад +7

      I've been hounding Eric to get his hands on a 300 for a teardown but they're so fucking reliable that cores never show up haha. I have an 85 and a 95 F150, both with that engine, both with manuals. Love 'em both.

    • @dougrobinson8602
      @dougrobinson8602 2 года назад +2

      @@TestECull We used to run F-150s with the I6 300. Mostly highway, with some local parts running. Manual transmissions. We never had to replace an engine, and some of them had well over 300,000 miles. They got three times the mileage of the oldest truck we had with a 460 under the hood. That 460 was bomb-proof, too.

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull 2 года назад +4

      @@dougrobinson8602 Best OHV engine Ford ever sold. Pulls like a 302 on a third less gas with a life expectancy measured in decades because odometers dont go high enough 🤣🤘

  • @jeromedraad5810
    @jeromedraad5810 2 года назад +4

    Had the same 4L in a jeep Wrangler in the shop this past year, thing had completely seized, and when we pulled the pan there was mud in it. When asked, the owner denied having driven it in water or anything. We sent it away for a complete revision along with boring it out into a 4.6L. It now makes 300 hp and 600 Nm of torque.😁 Was quite a fun project. Had to modify and rebuild the entire jeep as it wasnt roadworthy anymore. One hell of a project for me and another mechanic, but a lot of fun

  • @MeDicen_Rocha
    @MeDicen_Rocha 2 года назад +98

    For a piston skirt failure, that one actually seems pretty tame. Usually the piston comes apart and the wrist pin hammers into the block until it either makes an inspection port or it seizes.

    • @johndeeregreen4592
      @johndeeregreen4592 2 года назад +6

      Yeah, that was VERY surprising the wrist pin didn't go sailing and lock the engine up.

    • @JackParsons2
      @JackParsons2 2 года назад +12

      "Makes an inspection port" lol that's a hilarious way to look at it.

    • @GAMRMNTS2
      @GAMRMNTS2 2 года назад

      No it doesn’t

    • @MeDicen_Rocha
      @MeDicen_Rocha 2 года назад +1

      @BB Sky it doesnt, which is exactly the problem. The piston around the wrist pin comes apart, and the rod starts hammering it into the sides of the bore until either the engine gets an inspection port, the rod lets go or the engine seizes.

    • @johndeeregreen4592
      @johndeeregreen4592 2 года назад +1

      @BB Sky, pins are pressed in by heating the rod. They can become worn over time and walk themselves out.

  • @bennyd8471
    @bennyd8471 2 года назад +5

    Had a 99tj with about 90k on it break a skirt on the piston on cyl 6. Thought it was a rod knock at first. Pulled it and tore it down. Found the rod on cyl 4 visually bent as well. Never hydrolocked it. Figured I had it apart so go big or go home. Went .030" over, stroked it with a 4.2L crank, Comp Cams camshaft, bigger injectors amongst exhaust and others. I was very happy with the build!

  • @mrkeith1998
    @mrkeith1998 2 года назад +3

    Just did a full rebuild on my 2004 WJ 4.0 after It broke a piston skirt. I bought It last July as a winter vehicle and It had a rattle and I couldn't get It to go away. Everyone said It was completely normal for a 4.0 to rattle. I tried everything on the internet to get rid of the rattle, tried using a oil filter that held more oil and still nothing. Noise was always the same but would go away when fully warmed up. But come back on a cold start. It got me through a whole winter of beating on It and was using It as a a backup one summer day and was ok the highway and the rattle turned Into a knock. Drove straight home and parked It. Thought a lifter had gave up and tried thicker oil and even Lucas oil and nothing made the noise get quieter. That's when I knew It was an Internal problem. Started tearing It apart and found cylinder 4 with a broken piston skirt. Did a full rebuild and now you can't even hear that It's running. It's been back together about 5 months and I've made It my daily even before winter started and I do not baby this engine except on maintenance. I did all the piston upgrades, moly pistons, moly rings all new bearings. Hardest part of the whole job was getting the intake and exhaust manifolds off while It was still In the Jeep. When putting It back together, I Installed the manifolds onto the head before I put It back In the Jeep. So much easier, but extremely heavy and would recommend a 2nd person to help lift onto engine.

  • @justsumguy2u
    @justsumguy2u 2 года назад +52

    I like the 4.0 because of it's AMC lineage. But those cracks in the head you saw are common on certain years, and that's Chrysler's fault, because they redesigned the head. After a couple of years, they saw the common failure pattern, and came out with yet another redesign that fixed the cracking problem.

    • @randymagnum143
      @randymagnum143 2 года назад +3

      The 258 cracked heads when overheated.

    • @stevelacker358
      @stevelacker358 2 года назад +7

      The most crack-prone heads are just from the start of the distributorless ignition until late 2000. The head casting with the improvement has the letters TUPY cast under the valve cover, but it’s still not quite as good as the 1999 head. IMO, 1999 is the single best year of the 4.0. It has all the strengthening and improvements to the crank and block that Chrysler made over the early kinda flexible AMC design (including the main cap spine),still has the tubular header, has the improved intake manifold, has the best ECM programming, but doesn’t have the issues that came with the head when it was redesigned for the coil rail mounting needed for DIS.

    • @v12alpine
      @v12alpine 2 года назад +5

      @@stevelacker358 +1 the '99 was the best year with thrust plate cam, horseshoe intake and OG distributor. 96-99 OBD2 is my favorite years.

    • @normanjansen1663
      @normanjansen1663 2 года назад +1

      Too bad these engineers should leave good enough alone

    • @litz13
      @litz13 2 года назад +5

      Best part about 97-99 is they don't have any of the advanced emissions Jeep used to try and eek out more lifetime.
      Just the one O2 sensor, single bank of six exhaust (which will always crack), distributor, so so so easy to work one.
      You can do the entire ignition (plugs, wires, cap, etc) for a third of the cost of coil packs.

  • @chuckycheese84
    @chuckycheese84 2 года назад +52

    So glad to see the 4.0 inline 6. They are so hard to find as cores. One of the best engines ever made.
    Would still love to see a GM 3800 series engine on the channel, or a 3.5L V6 from the 93-97 Intrepids/Concords

    • @dougrobinson8602
      @dougrobinson8602 2 года назад +9

      I second the 3.8. It's one of the most reliable engines ever built if taken care of. Incredible highway mileage as well.

    • @jonharris794
      @jonharris794 2 года назад

      @@dougrobinson8602 Yes, 3.8 or 231.

    • @tylerelam6222
      @tylerelam6222 2 года назад

      I’ve had both the 3800 is rock solid the mopar 3.5 at the time had a very weak bottom end and I ended up spinning a bearing

    • @Hiei2k7
      @Hiei2k7 Год назад +1

      My family had both of those. The 3800 Vortec was BULLET. PROOF. The 3.5 was fine enough, but the transmission that rode behind it was garbage. Lost reverse out of it at 36k miles.

    • @lastotallyawesomebleach204
      @lastotallyawesomebleach204 Год назад +2

      @@dougrobinson8602 the Achilles heel on the later 3800 engines was the plastic intake plenum, which was notorious for getting brittle and cracking, which would dump coolant into the engine. If you buy any car with one of those engines, make sure you replace that part right away.

  • @scottduthie2912
    @scottduthie2912 Год назад +6

    The cylinder head definitely feels like 89 lbs when you are leaning over the front of the jeep or the fender to remove it and even more when you are putting it back on

  • @TheStiver
    @TheStiver 2 года назад +6

    Yes, Finally!!! My favorite engine too. In fact, I'm dailying my 04 WJ at the moment because well, it's the only thing I own that doesn't ever break. From what I remember, somewhere around 2000-2002 were the problem years with cylinder heads cracking, at least for the WJ. By around 03 and definitely for all 04's have a different head (denoted by the "TUPY" stamping under the oil fill cap) that isn't prone to cracking. I'm 32 and I expect my 4.0 to outlive me!

  • @stevewesley8187
    @stevewesley8187 Год назад +2

    Can't remember the year for the water pump change , but if memory serves me when jeep went to serpentine belt the water pump went reverse rotation but the old pump will still fit . May be part of the problem , wrong rotation will still move some water but not enough .........

  • @badkarma425
    @badkarma425 2 года назад +6

    I've got a 1946 cj2a and it's still running the original 4cylinder GoDevil engine. Built to last!

  • @jeffpolakiewicz2277
    @jeffpolakiewicz2277 2 года назад +7

    There was a little known issue with water pumps. The inline sixes had 2 water pumps. V grove turned one way. Serpentine turned opposite. They could easily be switched and the coolant would not circulate properly causing meltdown of the center two pistons.

  • @Lammergeier350
    @Lammergeier350 2 года назад +23

    Thank you! Another one off the list!
    This engine is, of course, one of the most durable and torquiest motors available from the late seventies through the early aughts. The inherent primary and secondary balance of the straight six aside, just the combination of torque, ease of maintenance, and simplicity all made it the absolute pinnacle of the Wrangler powerhouse. This engine is still the best 6 cylinder that has ever been in a Chrysler product (slant six aside), and I have a couple customers that have their Grand Cherokees and wranglers up past 300K. Having to drop the 242 and the 318 from their lineup has left FCA continuing to fight for a 6 or 8 cylinder gas engine of any sort of quality, a fight that to this day has not been won. Yes, I know what I said. The Gen 3 hemi is barely worth its weight as a boat anchor.
    Of course you're not going to have a problem with the dipstick tube - it's not on a GM product.
    Engine Requests:
    Ford: 300 Inline Six, Windsor, FE, 1.0 EcoBoost, 1.4 EcoBoost, 5.2 Voodoo, 6.7 PowerStroke
    General Motors: 3100/3400/3800 Olds, LUW/LWE 1.8l i4, L5P Duramax
    Chrysler: Slant Six, MORE HEMIS, 1.4L FIRE, 3.3/3.8, 318/360
    Honda: B Series, D Series, K Series
    Toyota: 1GZ-FE, 1ZZ or 2ZZ
    Subaru: FJ series, EZ30/36
    Other: DT466
    Old School Unicorns: GM 702 Twin-Six, Oldsmobile 5.7 Diesel, LT5 Lotus (C4 ZR1)
    Modern Unicorns: Toyota 1LR-GUE, Chevrolet Gemini, 7.3 Godzilla

    • @chuckz8053
      @chuckz8053 2 года назад

      Well now we know.

    • @Lammergeier350
      @Lammergeier350 2 года назад +6

      @@chuckz8053 And knowing is half the battle. The other half? Extreme violence.

    • @Anarchy522XD
      @Anarchy522XD 2 года назад +2

      He has an EZ36 on the shelf/rack to his left our right when he shows the other 4.0 on the ground. I know it's a 36 because the intake runners are huge. I doubt he will take it apart but it'd be nice. Those EZ are not easy to disassemble. Even worse to get together.

    • @GalenlevyPhoto
      @GalenlevyPhoto 2 года назад +1

      Honda F20/22. I wanna see how those 9000 rpm motors tick. :)

    • @AandWProductions
      @AandWProductions 2 года назад +1

      And Olds 5.7 diesel would be cool to see, but they're rare. An LT5 is rarer yet. That was the best DOHC GM ever built and how they got the Northstar from it is beyond me.

  • @Me-zo8yc
    @Me-zo8yc 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for the entertainment over the year. Have a beer on me, happy Christmas to you and your family.

  • @arnoldm889
    @arnoldm889 2 года назад +52

    My brother had one of these in a jeep that had over 200k. It had a cracked radiator so he'd have to refill it. Sometimes he would drive longer than 30 minutes without coolant and the temp pegged on H and when he got home it would be bone dry. Drove like this for a few months. He had it for a year more and sold it to the neighbor who had it for years. Have to work hard to kill a 4.0

    • @ericwalstrand3512
      @ericwalstrand3512 2 года назад +5

      I had it in the Jeep Commanche and Cherokee. They had some getup and go in them

    • @DB-yj3qc
      @DB-yj3qc Год назад +1

      I've currently have 4 from 91-05 one of unknown year in my 90XJ it was replaced twice in the past warranty replacement first the second was due to bad replacement oil pump. Solid engines with simple upkeep on oil, coolant and plugs

    • @Sube-Tube
      @Sube-Tube Год назад

      It's insane what these 4 liters can take

    • @30AndHatingIt
      @30AndHatingIt Год назад

      Your brother is an a-hole. Driving a half hour with no coolant, wtf.

  • @markdavis8888
    @markdavis8888 2 года назад +11

    Sold mine after 350,000 miles and it still ran great. It was the family adventure vehicle. Heavy loads and back country roads were no problem for our 1995 sport. It did have a cracked exhaust and after my son used it two of the engine mount studs were cracked. I welded the engine mount back to the studs and it was good to go.

  • @mattbrown5511
    @mattbrown5511 2 года назад +29

    I've seen that kind of damage in 4.0L in-line 6 before. The 2 main reasons are 1) Prolonged high revving from trying to get unstuck in deep mud, or 2) very steep angles during rock crawling. I have owned many Jeep (Chrysler models) over the last 35+ years. Being involved with off-roading clubs has given me experience with the typical failures for people pushing their vehicles to the failure point.

  • @johncarter1137
    @johncarter1137 2 года назад +5

    My son bought a 2004 Grand Cherokee with the 4.0 and drove the hang out of it. I got it and drove the hang out of it then gave it back to my son, and he drove the hang out of it then gave it to his father-in-law, and now he's driving the hang out of it. The computer is starting to go away, but the engine's been solid.

    • @dopeman420
      @dopeman420 2 года назад +1

      Those are known for pcm rot.

  • @jeandunow7794
    @jeandunow7794 2 года назад +88

    Can you imagine going in for a physical exam and your doctor making the same noises as Eric does when he examines this engine block?!?! (Hmmm....maybe it wouldn't be that funny after all. 😱)

    • @reubensandwich9249
      @reubensandwich9249 2 года назад +7

      I got flashbacks from a dentist visit watching that.

    • @Budrob998
      @Budrob998 2 года назад +1

      What your doc don’t?

    • @liver.flush.maestro
      @liver.flush.maestro 2 года назад +1

      🤣🤣🤣!!!

    • @bcubed72
      @bcubed72 2 года назад +3

      I can't imagine going to the proctologist and him making an ATM joke like he did.

    • @christopherreed4723
      @christopherreed4723 2 года назад +8

      I was just thinking of a surgeon musing to himself "Hmmmm-hmmmm. Looks good. That's good. Oh, *that's* not supposed to be there!"
      Actually, considering the context (that 4.0 was very thoroughly deceased) probably an ME.

  • @stan7158
    @stan7158 2 года назад +8

    There is a clear crack in the cylinder head, between #2 and #3 rocker arms. It can be seen just by removing the oil fill cap and looking in the valve cover. I was a jeep tech in the early 00s, this was very common on 98-03 cylinder heads. I replaced hundreds under warranty.

    • @Deadbuck73
      @Deadbuck73 4 месяца назад

      I think my 99 came with the 30 year/300k mile warranty! Knock on wood it seems to be going well so far. Coming up on 274k

  • @CableGula
    @CableGula Год назад +6

    Had a 95 GC with the 4.0 with 325k when I sold it. Only problem I ever had with was the water pumps shreading every 20-30k miles. I got very good at that routine maintenace.

  • @curiousottman
    @curiousottman Год назад +1

    When you rotated the engine and all of the tappets fell out it brought back fond memories of my 83 CJ7 and it’s lifter problems. Still runs great today.

  • @MrOnemanop
    @MrOnemanop 2 года назад +9

    I really appreciate how you speed through repeated bolt removal once the initial fastener is dealt with like on heads and rockers. Very enjoyable and informative stuff!

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 Год назад

      one spark plug that's all you really need is one cylinder to fire for the engine to run🤣

  • @freday2005
    @freday2005 Год назад +2

    The later 4.0L engine built between 1999 and about 2002 used a head casting #0331 and was prone to cracking between the 3rd and 4th cylinder due to the exhaust port redesign to meet emissions. This same head casting #0331 was redesigned and they added a TUPY casting mark on the surface of the head just under the oil fill cap. The head with the TUPY marking was corrected to prevent this cracking. The #7120 casting between about 1996 and 1999 I believe is the best for performance as it was less restricted before the emissions redesign.

  • @allenl9031
    @allenl9031 2 года назад +4

    Eric, when you disappeared off screen pulling the cam, I expected you to edit it to look like the cam kept going on forever, you know how a magician pulls the endless handkerchief out of his hand,

    • @litz13
      @litz13 2 года назад

      It was fun to watch, just kept coming out.
      We're just so used to seeing only 4 cylinders with worth of cam emerge from the engine.

    • @revolutionday1
      @revolutionday1 2 года назад

      Definitely not replacing one with the motor still in the body, without removing a whole lotta' stuff first....

  • @TurbineFlyer
    @TurbineFlyer 2 года назад +3

    Love my 95' 4.0! It's just broken in at 205k miles. I replaced the water pump and thermostat on my own. Pretty easy to work on

  • @cablenowadays6586
    @cablenowadays6586 2 года назад +18

    That block would be good for a over bore and then a stroker setup.

    • @FeetusMcCarland
      @FeetusMcCarland 2 года назад +6

      Waste of time

    • @megason2
      @megason2 2 года назад +9

      I SAW A CRACK on the deck of the block

    • @alexstromberg7696
      @alexstromberg7696 2 года назад +2

      All that for max 200hp

    • @mdubz101
      @mdubz101 2 года назад

      @@alexstromberg7696 add boost!

    • @TireSlayer55
      @TireSlayer55 Год назад +1

      @@alexstromberg7696 Ummm no. It makes about 200hp stock and stokers can make 300+ hp.
      Why do some people always feel the need to comment on things they know literally nothing about?

  • @twinturbotaj
    @twinturbotaj 2 года назад +3

    One time I pulled apart a 4.0 from like a '92 Comanche and it had been run at least 60 miles distance with pieces of a broken valve riding bouncing around inside a cylinder. Top of the piston all scarred up and walls not perfect. I ground the top of the piston with a dremel tool, threw on the rebuilt cyl head, and it ran perfect for over 10K miles until I sold her.

  • @rodneymiddleton9624
    @rodneymiddleton9624 2 года назад +4

    I've repaired quite a few of those with piston skirt failure. Overheating doesn't help things either. They start making a thunking noise like tapping on a tin can at idle when they start failing. Those can be repaired with a set of pistons and rings. I always opted to do the timing chain and bearings. They literally run for ever if you catch it early. The last one I did was a 2001. Thanks!

  • @adamk203
    @adamk203 2 года назад +8

    Don't trash that block! It may be suitable for an overbore as long as there are no cracks in it. Someone might be interested in buying it for a stoker build.

  • @edwardbelcher8612
    @edwardbelcher8612 2 года назад +6

    love the Jeep 4.0 and the Ford 300 6 cylinder engines

  • @Beethoven2949
    @Beethoven2949 2 года назад +3

    UK mechanic here, I absolutely love the channel, I'm addicted. You do a lot of complicated big blocks I would love if you could do some small European engines like some small inline 4 cylinders as that's mainly what we drive over here and their an absolute breeze to teardown and rebuild 😊

  • @powcod7455
    @powcod7455 2 года назад +3

    Finally! I'm glad you finally made a video on this engine. The 4.0L is the only good thing about my jeep and it still isn't perfect. I just read the description and my uncle has a 2004 WJ grand cherokee with over 350k miles it takes literally a minute of cranking but it still starts and runs

  • @shango066
    @shango066 2 года назад +4

    Those Valvoline oil filters don't have a bypass valve, seen them plug up and cause codes or destroy engines several times

  • @MrGGPRI
    @MrGGPRI 2 года назад +41

    A mechanic friend told me a story about one of his customers that had towed a Cherokee using a front axle type dolly for about 50 miles and then remembered that he had forgot to take the trans out of low gear and then found the engine wouldn't start. He pulled the head and ALL pistons were missing- just con rods and wrist pins were left...

    • @spasticslug2932
      @spasticslug2932 2 года назад +5

      Calling BS on that story. If it was an automatic, the engine wouldn't turn. If it was a manual, he'd been dragging the wheels.

    • @GMbowtie350
      @GMbowtie350 2 года назад +5

      @@spasticslug2932 Yeah, you’d ruin the transmission and that’s about it. The only possible way that story would hold water was if it was a straight shift left in 5th gear, and even then it’s not gonna do what he said it would, especially just after 50 miles.

    • @TireSlayer55
      @TireSlayer55 Год назад

      BS… unless it had no serpentine belt on, if the crank was turning the water pump would be turning, if the engine got warm enough the thermostat would open and the radiator would cool the engine just the same as if it was running.
      But more than likely it would just drag the rear wheels…

    • @MrGGPRI
      @MrGGPRI Год назад

      it happened, I know the mechanic that replaced the engine.

  • @jeffreyjeepman3599
    @jeffreyjeepman3599 2 года назад +1

    Just replaced a 02 with 112000 miles for the same thing customer thought he had a lifter problem engine ticked. Dropped the pan and no skirt on # 3 and 5 pistons common problem. jeep dealer told owner you have a 50/50 chance you got one with defective pistons! Engine was spotless inside well maintained as clean on top as on the underside.

  • @Vegheadshow
    @Vegheadshow 2 года назад +65

    After just tearing a toilet apart going spelunking for my headphones, I needed to see someone else tear something else down and get gross.

    • @ianriggs
      @ianriggs 2 года назад +4

      @Lil Smoot I have never heard that word in my life and I am not sheltered grammar wise. Learn something new every day lol

    • @miztatone918
      @miztatone918 2 года назад +6

      I think 🤔... I think 🤔 I'd just have bought a new pair and flushed them 😂

    • @miztatone918
      @miztatone918 2 года назад +5

      @@ianriggs isn't spelunking just another word for cave exploration

    • @Drmcclung
      @Drmcclung 2 года назад

      Hahahahaha!!!!

    • @Pwills
      @Pwills 2 года назад

      I agree just flush and get new ones

  • @carterschaper5620
    @carterschaper5620 2 года назад +1

    I have a 2001 Cherokee that used to be a cop car until 100,000 miles. I bought it at 130,000 and by 135,000 the engine had no power at all. Wouldn’t even climb hills. Took it to a shop and they said it was a miracle it even made it there. It was just a worn out girl that needed replaced.

  • @KubanKevin
    @KubanKevin 2 года назад +21

    Greatest engine AMC produced (RIP) and one of the greatest engines of all time.

  • @buddy8225
    @buddy8225 2 года назад +1

    I learned how to replace a distributor on one of these engines. Best time of my life.

  • @mphilleo
    @mphilleo 2 года назад +8

    You magnificent madman, you finally got one for us! I've owned many Jeeps with the 4.0, XJs and ZJs both, so this is going to be fun. Besides piston skirts and the TUPY heads, these were solid. Although the cooling system was rather inadequate in the XJ, application. You have to ON TOP of cooling system maintenance on those. ZJs were a clean sheet design, so the 4.0 was integrated correctly in those from the get go.

    • @lustfulvengance
      @lustfulvengance 2 года назад

      What causes the Piston skirts to break on these?
      I've seen it a lot but I've never been able to understand what really causes it 🤔🤔

    • @dopeman420
      @dopeman420 2 года назад

      My 02 wj never gets hot, has 220k on it and I drive it up north n back 400 miles both ways in extreme heat and stop and go interstate congestion. Never runs hot, always on top of oil changes I do myself with pennzoil and Fram filters everyone hates for some reason. I've ran Fram my whole life never had an issue, I also use Lucas oil treatment.

    • @litz13
      @litz13 2 года назад +4

      I've found on my XJ, that you just replace the entire cooling system every 4-5 years.
      There's two Achilles Heels:
      1) the viscous fan clutch wears out
      2) the radiator fills up with sediment.
      As long as you shotgun the whole thing, and give it a good flush, it's really no problem.

    • @mphilleo
      @mphilleo 2 года назад +1

      @@lustfulvengance I don't have a specific answer, but most people agree it's a materials/design issue (dimensions of the skirt). It also affected the 4.2 inline 6, the 4.0s predecessor. My understanding is that it officially only affected about 6% of all units, although reality could be different. When you consider literally millions of these were produced, 6% or more is a decent figure.

    • @JeffDeWitt
      @JeffDeWitt 2 года назад +1

      @@litz13 I think the sediment thing is due to mixing coolant. I've had it in my XJ, but since the last time I replaced the radiator and gave the whole system a good flushing I've stuck with plain, old fashioned green coolant and stayed away from the universal stuff. My 4.0 runs nice and cool, even in the summer with the AC on.

  • @robertosotelo882
    @robertosotelo882 2 года назад +2

    I did order the pizza and seat and relax to watch the tear down, I like to see one o those first gen Nissan Titan engines on that “autopsie table “

  • @cablenowadays6586
    @cablenowadays6586 2 года назад +4

    Yes finally. I’ve been wanting to see one of these bad boys for a while

  • @brianallen9810
    @brianallen9810 Год назад

    04:38 "This water pump looks like new and would be a good backup" then sounds of the water pump being tossed unceremoniously across the room. This is why I love this channel.

  • @sidneysanders5726
    @sidneysanders5726 2 года назад +3

    That version of the 4.0L was used in the 2000-2006 jeep wrangler, and the 1999-2004 grand cherokee, I can tell by looking at the water pump and the accessory drive

  • @tommontague5721
    @tommontague5721 2 года назад +1

    I have a 2006 Golden Eagle 4.0, C.J. auto trans, a/c just turned 60,000 miles, still runs like new. I'm a service nut and stay up on servicing it. Changed the water pump and thermostat and hoses at 50,000 mi just because of age...Love that Jeep!

  • @johndeeregreen4592
    @johndeeregreen4592 2 года назад +17

    13 years as a flat-rate mechanic, owned 7 XJs (have one with nearly 300k miles), and I have NEVER seen this level of damage to a 4.0l.

    • @RANDOMNATION907
      @RANDOMNATION907 2 года назад +1

      I'm a retired mechanic of over 30yrs. and current 4.0L owner and I've replaced over a dozen exploded 4.0L in my career. Leave them stock and drive them gently or they Will break. That's the advise I've learned to give.

    • @johndeeregreen4592
      @johndeeregreen4592 2 года назад +1

      @@RANDOMNATION907, huh, driven the hell out of my current XJ with a 4.0l, and it's at 280k miles without a single issue. Where the 4.0l runs into issues are the late 1996-2006 (2001 for the XJ). These engines have some know issues with severe overheating from a flawed head design and piston skirt failures causing engine failure.

    • @JohnGarcia-ii8lb
      @JohnGarcia-ii8lb Год назад +1

      Seems to be that the early 4.0s are stronger then the later ones idk why or how , own and owned alot seem damage at later model ones

    • @johndeeregreen4592
      @johndeeregreen4592 Год назад +1

      @@JohnGarcia-ii8lb, 1997-2004 (last year of the 4.0l) is known to have weaker piston skirts... even then, I haven't seen one experience this level of destruction.

    • @madebydade305ify
      @madebydade305ify Год назад

      ​@@johndeeregreen4592how good are the 2.5?

  • @Bill-sp8kb
    @Bill-sp8kb 2 года назад +2

    Good save with that drain pan!

  • @deanlaman3844
    @deanlaman3844 2 года назад +9

    Please find a blown up 3800 series pre 2004. I want to see how someone can kill a very reliable engine

  • @nick39
    @nick39 8 месяцев назад

    My favorite part of your videos is where you analyze a part… say “It’s pretty good. We can use it as a spare or back up.” Then , toss it into the junk pile. I don’t know if I’m the none who gets your sense of humor, but I love it!!😂😂 Love your videos!

  • @UpanovrOffroad
    @UpanovrOffroad 2 года назад +5

    That was some impressive damage! Great video as usual. There’s a couple 4.0’s in my driveway.

  • @TroyRosenbaugh
    @TroyRosenbaugh Год назад

    Had 93 grand Cherokee. Motor was bout shot, so I bought a White Brothers 4.6L kit for it, that thing was a beast! That motor your dismantling is roasted, mistreated bad.. great vid man. Commentary is priceless!!!! Great vids Eric!!

  • @ericreimer6627
    @ericreimer6627 2 года назад +14

    Since the cylinder head cracks line up with the most damaged pistons, I'll guess coolant was getting into those cylinders causing detonation, which leads to the torched pistons. I'm impressed the pistons didn't come apart with how loose they were on the wrist pins!

    • @colin5064
      @colin5064 Год назад +2

      l would agree with your thoughts on the damage cause

    • @wabi_sabi_vida
      @wabi_sabi_vida Год назад

      Thats the beauty of momentum. It broke just right.

    • @Sube-Tube
      @Sube-Tube Год назад +1

      Bet the engine still ran too

  • @muddy-one
    @muddy-one Год назад +1

    👍 thanks for making me feel better about my 4.0 with 319k miles on it! It's had a oil leak on the last 2 cylinders coming out the head gasket for about 60k miles. It's always been on my "I'll get around to it..." list.

  • @donaldatkinson7937
    @donaldatkinson7937 2 года назад +5

    My brother had a box style Cherokee, with the high output, I think they called it, it had over 300,000 and ran like new! You couldn't kill it, he traded it in on a new car.

  • @michaeljucius9509
    @michaeljucius9509 2 года назад +1

    Got a 97 with an old trw 5.0l stroker kit and a hesco aluminum head. Threw on an m90 blower and a pacesetter header blowing through a dual 2 3/4 exhaust. Sounds awesome and just will not die!

  • @90sdrift
    @90sdrift 2 года назад +6

    Your videos keep getting better and better! I love watching you channel, its relaxing and entertaining. Always looking forward to seeing your new tear-downs and project updates. Your commentary is my favorite part lol. Merry Christmas man!

  • @nomuff2tuff87
    @nomuff2tuff87 Год назад +1

    I’m a technician and to be honest I’ve had nothing but bad luck with the Chrysler 4.0. Sad by true. Always overheated or head warped it’s always a bad egg. Piston slap as well.

  • @johnmoore8599
    @johnmoore8599 2 года назад +13

    Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! Thanks for all the humor and jokes throughout all these tear downs and projects! You are like an auto coroner on the channel, but you also save a lot of cars from the salvage yards. You should be called the car doctor for all the autopsies and projects. Keep up the great work!

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 Год назад

      this just goes to show you can even destroy a spicy 4.0 engine if you try hard enough🤣

  • @haloondrugs1173
    @haloondrugs1173 2 года назад +1

    We all have cars we never should of sold, for me my f250 and bronco, miss them so much 😢

  • @richwielechowski5191
    @richwielechowski5191 2 года назад +22

    Eric, Merry Christmas to you and your family. Thanks for taking us along with you this past year. I’ve enjoyed your videos, your humor and presentation style!

  • @eieghn
    @eieghn Год назад

    Man you brought me back to the 90's! I was one of the Senior Technicians on this engine at Chrysler Jeep Truck Engineering in Detroit. The 4.0L engines commonly ran 2 to 3 times longer than the target of 1000 hours on durability test.

  • @jdracer111
    @jdracer111 2 года назад +6

    I'm convinced that inline engines are better than V4 or V6s. Just my opinion.

    • @JackHagar
      @JackHagar 3 месяца назад

      Smoother and more reliable fs

  • @michaelwilkening8542
    @michaelwilkening8542 Год назад +1

    I 100% agree with the early exhaust manifolds. I would be replacing at least one a week at the Midas shop I worked at. The replacement ones had a small flex section on the number 1 and 6 pipe to prevent a recurrence.

  • @Iowa599
    @Iowa599 2 года назад +17

    Since that engine development was started in 1956 by Nash, then it was made by Hudson, then made by Rambler, then made AMC, then made by Chrysler for Jeep…
    After 50+ years, they better have figured out how to make it work right!

    • @nuttfarmgarage6434
      @nuttfarmgarage6434 2 года назад +10

      The 4.0 actually was based on the 232 first put in 1965 model year AMC’s, and shares nothing with the earlier 6 cylinder engine.

    • @JeffDeWitt
      @JeffDeWitt 2 года назад

      @@nuttfarmgarage6434 Just to pick a nit, according to Wiki the new 232 was introduced in May of 1964.

    • @brandonupchurch7628
      @brandonupchurch7628 2 года назад +9

      @@JeffDeWitt What part of 1965 model year do you not understand?

    • @Iowa599
      @Iowa599 2 года назад

      @@nuttfarmgarage6434 the early engine was changed repeatedly to make improvements. Just 'cause new parts don't fit old junk doesn't mean the whole thing is different. One step leads to the next, and you can't get to the top without climbing the steps.

    • @JeffDeWitt
      @JeffDeWitt 2 года назад

      @@brandonupchurch7628 Last I looked 1964 was before 1965. The 232 was introduced in the special edition 1964 Rambler Typhoon. The article in Wiki even has a picture of the car and the license plate says "1964".

  • @TroyRosenbaugh
    @TroyRosenbaugh 7 месяцев назад

    My 96' grand Cherokee has a V8 5.2L (318). Been awesome rig. The motor was replaced back in 2014 by previous owner, with an '03 dodge dakota motor, bolted right up along with all accoutraments. Jeep is still pretty much stock but is a great driver, all I'vehad to do to itis tires, a few sensors, new alternator. Great vid Eric!!

  • @ericneeds1512
    @ericneeds1512 2 года назад +10

    Which is more ... bulletproof, in your opinion. 4.0 L Jeep or 225 CI Slant Six ? Have you torn one of these down. I had one (moons ago) which continuously had 'grey' oil and a leakiny rear main (fill the oil, check the gas). TBH, the oil leak kept the body of the D-150 (A833) frame from rusting. The carbon (1bbl) kept the exhaust from rusting.

    • @dougrobinson8602
      @dougrobinson8602 2 года назад +4

      My friend had a slat six in his old Dodge dart Swinger. We actually tried to kill it with a brick on the accelerator pedal. It revved up and would not quit. Valve float kept it from revving too high, and we finished off a six pack waiting. Never died.

    • @johneckert1365
      @johneckert1365 Год назад +1

      I vote for slant 6

  • @brassnyuks3849
    @brassnyuks3849 2 года назад

    I just bought a 99 Jeep Wrangler with the 4.0. Everyone told me to buy a jeep with that engine in it. Glad i did. They look really easy to work on. hopefully i wont have to for some time.

  • @AJ67901
    @AJ67901 2 года назад +6

    I look forward to Saturday evening so I can see what you're going to tear down! Thank you from an armchair mechanic!

  • @sidneysanders5726
    @sidneysanders5726 2 года назад +1

    The 0331 cylinder head has a casting defect, the replacement casting is a "TUPY" head

  • @azoffroad234
    @azoffroad234 2 года назад +6

    The exhaust manifold isn't difficult unless you own a Cherokee lmao 🤣 that was probably the most time consuming repair i've had to do to mine lol

  • @mcgama88
    @mcgama88 Год назад

    My daily driver is a 94 cherokee with a fresh 4.0. The issue I have was a used torque converter that leaks at the seal, as a very slight wear groove and where I installed a sleeve as round two. And where a driveway leak is problematic and waiting for a full trans refit. As for the rest of the body, I really like the simple, long lasting functionality. Very solid . Thanks for the full view to engine. M.

  • @O4erful
    @O4erful 2 года назад +15

    Man as much as I watch these.. I always laugh when you throw away the "good" water pumps.

    • @litz13
      @litz13 2 года назад

      In this case, they're $34 at NAPA. No point in keeping it no matter how good it looks.

    • @billchildress9756
      @billchildress9756 2 года назад +2

      EBAY!

  • @braddoomsday6401
    @braddoomsday6401 Год назад

    Love this guy! No bs, no flash. just great info. I'm running a 98 ZJ Grand Cherokee Laredo 157K just fought the death wobbles. think I might have got it, finally. KOW

  • @TheProjectHelpDesk
    @TheProjectHelpDesk 2 года назад +3

    Wouldn't mind seeing what the burned Vette engine looked like up close. Even if you don't wind up tearing it down.

  • @mongo228
    @mongo228 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for doing the 4.0L ... I have an 80 CJ with the 258. Never seen a melted piston like that in a Jeep I6!

    • @rodgood
      @rodgood 2 года назад

      In the old days people used to shut of their engines when they got hot . nowadays they just keep driving till they, can"t .

  • @destructionfun2
    @destructionfun2 2 года назад +6

    Hey Eric, love the video, would you ever do a Big Block Molar teardown? Would love to see a 440 or an old AMC 360.

    • @brianferus9292
      @brianferus9292 2 года назад

      You might need a dentist for that tear down.

    • @hirisk761
      @hirisk761 2 года назад

      Eric did a Chevy 454 teardown a few months back

  • @mikemorton6219
    @mikemorton6219 2 года назад +2

    With a flat tappet engine, you can check lifters for wear by placing "flat" ends together and see if they rock slightly. Ends are groundspherical when new.

  • @Wandering_Horse
    @Wandering_Horse 2 года назад +4

    Classic case of an over heating engine and the driver just saying "F' it, going for broke and going run this heap till it seizes!"
    I bet that baby sounded quite delightful running down the road with pistons screaming going into Chernobyl meltdown mode and I bet good money it smelled truly delicious, truly a worthy honorable mention meltdown. Thanks for sharing, glad I found your channel.

    • @johneckert1365
      @johneckert1365 Год назад

      Yup! It was probably a great running engine until they cooked it.

  • @eieghn
    @eieghn 2 года назад +1

    I was one of the Senior Technician's on the 4.0L engines. We beat the puppies out of those engines at Chrysler - Jeep Truck Engineering in the late 90's through the early 2000's. We had MANY examples of them that ran over 2500 hours on our engine dynos. STILL to this day, the 4.0 is one of my favorite engines.

    • @nomebear
      @nomebear 2 года назад +1

      I've seen some incredible mods made to these engines, and they're built to take it.

    • @rodgood
      @rodgood 2 года назад

      Why did the AMC design 4.7 fail so miserably ? was it a poor design or poor quality dodge parts ?

  • @benjamynbrady3443
    @benjamynbrady3443 2 года назад +3

    I was waiting for a jump scare looking in those manifold openings

  • @HypocriticYT
    @HypocriticYT 2 года назад

    I had a 91 Jeep Cherokee years ago from new. Developed a ticking noise under warranty. They replaced the top end and noise didn’t go away so they replaced the short block. Lasted me almost 400,000 kms before developing a tick so I sold it. Excellent vehicle and easy to work on 😊

  • @TestECull
    @TestECull 2 года назад +3

    5:39 It looks like it wouldn't be overly difficult to bolt a carb onto that intake manifold....

  • @charredskeleton
    @charredskeleton Год назад

    I like the way you speed up at times, the high pitched voice and pew, pew of the impact add comic effect and are entertaining.

  • @steinwaymodelb
    @steinwaymodelb 2 года назад +3

    First 2 causes that jump to the top of the list:
    1. Hydrolocking
    2. Overheating

  • @saywhat2014
    @saywhat2014 5 месяцев назад

    I had a mid 80's 2 door 4X4 Cherokee with the 4.0 and a five speed manual. Sold it with 250+K miles. Really a good little truck.

  • @joshjohnson6163
    @joshjohnson6163 2 года назад +4

    Man that 4.0 was ridden hard and put away wet by the previous owner.

  • @rodleypumpkins4174
    @rodleypumpkins4174 2 года назад +1

    Your fast forward sounds are very satisfying. Specially when your tq somthing down and you Hear the clicks. 😮

  • @Onewheelordeal
    @Onewheelordeal 2 года назад +4

    That dipstick removal really makes this engine a contender for the GOAT

  • @metalted6128
    @metalted6128 Год назад

    Knowing a few Jeep owners!!
    I’ll bet , that motor just crested Mt. Everest.
    When it failed!!!
    They would say!!
    Great video!!