Got a few jobs sorted this week during the evenings although, inevitably, not really the jobs I'd planned on doing. I put the drivers side sill in and fitted the floor, put some of the glass in the side panels and the rear door, part assembled the passenger door to see where the inner plate mounting bracket I need to add can go.
I also managed to get the lights and fittings into the wings and built most of the front end so, apart from the bonnet not being there, it looks pretty much complete from the front. I finally got hold of the special Land Rover "rivnuts" that are used for the seat mounts and fitted those. My new heavy duty rivnut tool wasn't man enough for the job as, although they have an M* thread they are basically M10 steel Rivnuts. Fortunately you can get to the back of them so a long M8 bolt, some washers and a nut did the job.
Today I decided to try and sort the engine oil leak out prior to driving it out of the plastic garage so I can fit the rear half shafts. Having diagnosed the problem as a leaking sump it was to be a simple job of dropping the sump, adding instant gasket, putting it back on again... couldn't be simpler... could it ?
2 hours later sump back on, new oil filter and 6 measured litres of oil back in and it's still pissing oil out of the gap between the sump and the flywheel cover plate...
Decided to take the cover plate off so I could get a better view of the leak. As the last of the bolts came undone and a slight gap appeared between the plate and the bellhousing a torrent of oil started escaping through the gap. I'm not exaggerating when i say around 3 litres of engine oil came out, perhaps I should have taken the wading plug out earlier !
Whilst pondering how on earth the gearbox bellhousing could get so much oil in it I realised a few other odd things may be connected.
1) Before I first fired the engine up I was surprise to find no oil in it, i didn't remember draining the oil when i removed the engine but then that was getting on for 3 years ago now so perhaps I had drained it.
2) When I was draining the oil prior to removing the sump this morning my drain can overflowed. This can holds around 10 litres of oil and I'd emptied it recently so it was a bit of a surprise but then the can has been squashed a few times in the past. I had to put the sump plug back in, empty the drain can and continue.
3) When I put the measured 6 litres of new oil into the engine it didn't register on the dipstick at all.
It took me a while to figure out what the problem was but when I did, all of the above suddenly made perfect sense ! At some point the dipstick tube had been pulled out of the engine by about 6 inches so when I filled it up prior to starting it for the first time I actually ended up without around double the amount of oil in it it should have had !
After straightening the tube out and inserting it properly, the oil level now registers on the dipstick and it seems like the "leak" is sorted. What was left of the afternoon was spent topping up the rest of the oils in the axles and transmission.