About a month and half ago, I totally ran out of oil and coolant - bad - no excuse.
There seemed to be a lot of oil around the bottom of the engine - maybe a leaking crank seal?
I refilled, and kept an eye on the levels, both of which seemed fine - it wasn't eating oil anyway.
Continued doing my normal 200-300 miles per week.
Then last week (while I was on holiday, 500 miles from home) it started acting like it had damp points or something. Engine was starting ok, but sounding like it was struggling to keep going. When I was pulling away from junctions, I had to really rev it first or there'd be no compression and I'd move like a snail.
At the end of the week (the morning of the drive home) it started squeaking, which was significantly worse by the time I was at my stop for the night, about 400 miles later.
Luckily I was staying with an agricultural engineer
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He opened the cam box cover, and it was obvious that there was no oil in the area of the 4th piston, and that cams 6 and 8 were worn.
The oil lubrication holes on those cams were glazed over, so he unclogged them, oiled the area up, and said to check again when I got home whether the area was now being lubricated, and hopefully it'll just be a camshaft replacement.
When I got home (100 miles later) I discovered I hadn't tightened the cam box cover properly - there'd been some leakage. I took the cover off, and it was obvious that there was still an oil blockage, and now the inside wall around those cams were covered with gritty-looking black oil. I presume that's from the metal that's been getting worn away on the cam?
I found that when I squirted oil into any of the lubrication holes on cams that were okay, the oil flowed out of adjascent cams. When I tried squirting it into cams 6 through 8, it just backed out.
I take it this means the inside of the camshaft is blocked?
Is it possible to predict if there's any other damage, such as valves, etc - and that replacing the camshaft will be all that's needed replaced?
If I decide to do this myself, what other things should I look out for, and how much of the engine will I have to strip down?
I'd feel happy doing any amount of work on the engine, if I had a Haynes manual (full stripdown and rebuild) for the car, but they've never published one for daewoos. I believe the lanos is based on the Vauxhall Astra chassis, but I've no idea if the engine is the same, so I don't know if a Haynes manual for an Astra will help (and unfortunately both the astra manuals in Halfords were still shrink wrapped)
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Does anyone know whether any other cars in the UK have the same engine, that a manual would be good for?
I do have a pdf of a full lanos parts manual that I found somewhere on the net - it's really helpful for a lot of stuff, but there's no proceedures in it for anything.
Oh yes, after reading on here today to tighten the cam cover until the nuts bottom out - I did just that - and one of the nuts sheared in half. Luckily it looks like there'll be enough length exposed when the cover's off again to remove it ok.
But it unfortunately means that I'm out of action until I get a new nut - I should be able to drive a couple miles to a shop, but nothing else. Does anyone know if those nuts are some sort of standard size?
Cheers!
Lanos 1.4 SE
March 2000
SOHC
101K miles
UK