justjeepin86
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2005
- Location
- Winston-Salem, NC
5.3 with belt removed. Great oil pressure, low mileage stock engine. It comes and goes.
All will be a real bitch in this car. I'll remove the starter in the am so I see if anything is visible.Sounds like metal on metal, can you drop the pan and check the rearmost crank bearing? Or remove the trans and converter and see if it continues. Could be a stuck band on the trans
Yep, running driving car. Drives and shifts pretty good.Doesn't sound like a vacuum leak. Sounds more like a dry bushing squeal to me. If it's around the flexplate, the only things I can think of are the starter bendix not retracting, the torque converter bushing, the transmission pump, or the converter not being bolted to the flexplate and the converter snout spinning inside the counterbore in the crank.
I'm guessing the transmission has fluid and it's probably a driveable car, but I don't know, so I named off what I could think of.
That sounds like probable cause for a torque converter bushingYep, running driving car. Drives and shifts pretty good.
One thing to note. This was an abandoned project i picked up. I did, unknowingly, start it the first time without the converter bolted up. I really thought it was a belt though.
Your reading comprehension is lacking.Sounds like the belt to me. You can see it making the noise every third rotation.
My first thing was to spray starting fluid all around the intake and tb, before I put the car back up on jack stands.I mean...the belt would be my first guess, but as we all see, it's not on in the video.
It sounds almost exactly like cutting an ID bore on something kinda thin walled, on a lathe, with a boring bar. I can't unhear it.
Definitely pull the starter and see if you can see anything inside the bellhousing. Rub marks on the back of the flexplate, any kind of material from the converter touching/rubbing something, or any evidence of the starter hanging up.
Any chance it's on the intake (before the throttle body) side? Probably not since you said it's loudest underneath the car, but I figured I'd ask anyway. Does it only do it at idle?
I'm quite intrigued as to the cause of this noise!
Your sarcasmometer is decalibratedYour reading comprehension is lacking.

You can see it making the noise every third rotation.
This was how I ended up being a dad the second timeit was barely in
How far should the converter engage the crank? it was barely in. See pic.
It's really weird though. I can slide the converter back and forth in the trans easily. And it slides right up to the flex plate with no gap. I didn't pull it in with the bolts. That's where my confusion lies. I'm thinking pump bushing, like @Shreddinlettuce mentioned.Well...more than that. Probably 1/4 to 3/8-ish. Enough so they're engaged, can run concentric, and the crank can help support the weight of the converter.
With the transmission bolted to the motor and the converter slid all the way back in to the pump, there should be a gap between the mount feet and the flexplate. You should be able to slide it forward and have everything mate up fairly flush.
My guess would be that the converter snout won't slide in the back of the crank. Then when they're bolted together and spinning, that's where the noise is coming from.
Best case, you can clean up the converter snout and get them to slide together. Not quite worst case, maybe you need a different converter. Worst case, the crank pocket is fubar.
It's really weird though. I can slide the converter back and forth in the trans easily. And it slides right up to the flex plate with no gap. I didn't pull it in with the bolts. That's where my confusion lies. I'm thinking pump bushing, like @Shreddinlettuce mentioned.
It's all the way forward, that's all I know. I'll know more when I try it by hand to see how it fits. For all I know, it has the wrong flex plate. Although one wouldn't think so.But is the pilot on the converter sliding in to the crank like it should?