So jag story time: Used to work at a Jaguar dealership and out back in the smoking area there was a v12 half disassembled not too far off looking than the one at the end of this video…. It was there because it was the “pissed off Jaguar mechanic punching bag”. Had been replaced years before I started working there and left out for whenever any of the mechanics got angry at some stupid Jaguar design of some kind, we could go out and beat on it with whatever tool or other engine part we had around and take some edge off. It had axles punched through pistons, tons of hammer marks, air chiseled chunks taken out of it, marks from being beat by pry bars, etc. Cool story bro, had to be there.
These are great engines. They are bulletproof - but I guess not if the owner dropped a stud in the engine. I have torn mine apart - new injectors, Teflon wiring, better coil, and it runs so smoothly. As others have said - these are LeMans winning engines in the late 80s - knocking Porsche down the ranks. The HE engine shown here has an 11.5-1 compression ratio. Those heads have the combustion chamber closed off around the spark plug to create a compact flame front. Very slick.
Jag story: I once wanted to take off the cylinder head of my 4,2L 6-cyl. XJ6. When trying to lift off the head with a hoist, I eventually found the front wheels off the ground. It was the same issue as on your V12: The headstuds, which run thru the water jacket, were rusted up and seized to the bores in the head. It took me two days with a hydraulic duck-beak style spreader to wiggle it upward, millimeter for millimeter. Man, was I pissed. Now I know there is a special tool for those heads, a kind of puller. It is a steel plate which bolts to the studs of the camshaft caps. Then bolts are screwed into the plate, they press against the head studs, forcing the head off.
Actually there are places on the engine block that one can put a simple hydraulic jack on. Leave the manifolds on, and just work the head off the stud forest one corner at a time.
You said you're too young to have had a proper Lucas experience, Hell, those of us that are old enough to have been around them new have never had a proper Lucas experience either, because they never worked properly. Lucas electronics were so good they could get five functions out of a two position switch- On, Off, flickering, intermittent, and half power. Lucas headlight switch positions: Off, Low, High, and Maybe. Lucas ignition systems saved their owners thousands if fuel costs... because you can't burn fuel if the car won't start. People say Ford invented intermittent windshield wipers, Those were actually invented by Lucas. Ford, however was the first to do it on purpose. Lucas had cylinder deactivation WAY before anyone else...
Lucas- get home before dark. Why do the British drink warm beer? Because their refrigerators are made by Lucas. If your jag isn’t leaking oil- are you sure it has oil in it. Land Rover- making mechanics out of drivers since 1948. Lucas wiring harness replacement smoke is available in case you’ve accidentally let the smoke out of your original wiring. Land Rover- we will take you anywhere, and leave you anywhere. I’ve found Lucas wiring itself to be fairly robust. The plastics inside the switches has a tendency to crack and that makes the switches fail. The switches also use contacts and so carbon up over time leading to failures. Most circuits in British cars do not use relays so full amperage is passing thru switches instead of relays- leading to failure. Lucas also did not use waterproof connectors hence more corrosion and failures.
The trays under the camshafts are meant to hold an oil bath on the cam when the engine is shut off. When the engine is started the cams are already sitting in an oil bath. As the engine runs the oil is pumped up to tray, excess spills over back to sump. When engine is stopped what's in the tray stays until engine is run again.
When you got the first one off with just a prybar, I thought, wow, luckiest guy in the world, then the second one wouldn't come off no matter what and I felt better. That is normal. Welcome to the club! There is actually a special tool to help with it but it can still take days.
Ferrari V12's from the 60s/70s are similar in getting the heads off. They used the steel studs to locate the head so they're all close tolerance holes, until a little galvanic corrosion happens, then they're no clearance holes. Last 330 GTC I did, I had to machine special tools that bolted in place of the valve gear and pushed on the studs. Still took several days of heat, penetrating oil, and other gentle persuasion to get them off.
@@rennkafer13 I'm curious about your opinion on something? In your view, which was the better engine? The Ferrari Colombo V12 or the Jaguar V12? Also, which was easier to work on?
@@ivanjulian2532 never did much with Jag V-12's as far as disassembly personally. As far as which is better, both can be built and work well, from the factory I'd give the edge to Ferrari.
i had a 1971 xj6 and it was great = put a manual choke - rebuilt carbys and distributor - some brakes and suspension = 130 mph just great = rebuilt engine - 270 bhp and then got a 1968 MK 2 daimler v8 250 sedan = super engine sound - bullet proof motoring !
Dude is a hack. Putting all those tool marks on rebuildable aluminum heads and block. If the block and heads were cracked that would be a different story.
Very good friend of mine used to race the XKE/E-Type back in the day... He used to run a worked-over 3.8. Bored out to something closer to 3.9, specialist pistons and rods, replacement forged steel crank, courtesy of a contact who operated a "Dunbar & Cook" Crankmaster... Swapped out the standard SUs for a set of triple Webers (45 DCOEs IIRC) on a specialist, one-off manifold. Good for 9000rpm and peak power at around 8k. Which might not sound like much in comparison with modern engines, but considering this was all based on 1960s design, not bad at all. And he went with a tuned up 3.8 over the 4.2 as the latter had all sorts of overheating issues when pushed hard. Despite the higher states of tune the engines were largely bulletproof - the "weak link" was either the gearbox (which my friend described as "agricultural" / "better suited to a tractor") and, until replaced, the wheels. He started racing on original, center-spinner spoked wheels... until he found spokes literally pulled through the rims where he was cornering so hard. Epic.
A story I heard somewhere was that when Ford were in process of buying Jaguar in late 80s, some Ford people came to look at one of Jaguars factories in UK, probably in Coventry area... and found a lathe that dated back to 1896 still being used to produce one particular part....
That foamy coolants is from mixing different types of coolants together. I work on transports and I’ve seen it multiple times. Drivers top up with whatever, next thing you know it’s foaming out of the reservoir, making a massive mess
I own a 1976 Jaguar XJ12. Its V12 expired in 1994 at 131,000 miles. It was like $10,000 at that time ($20,000 and higher now) to have a proper rebuild, so it got lumped with a JTR 350 Chevy and TH350 tans. That Jag V12 is an almost 800 lb. engine - my car lost about 400 lbs. weight in the conversion. Its a pretty standard 350, so it made roughly the same power. With the conversion weight loss its acceleration improved and it got better gas mileage. Jaguar people hate my car when they find out it now has a Chevy 350 engine - they refer to it as a lumped car.
These cars are actually what made me work at a dealership in the first place. I worked at the corner garage (now a pizza place) and we had an unusual number of old (at the time not all that old) Jags in the area. That and a service writer that just couldn't say no) brought a lot of these into the shop. These things drove me to a Hyundai dealer (at the time just a few steps above a used Yugo) but it was still better than trying to do a set of the inboard rear brakes on an XJ 6/12. And do a rotary. And if you truly want to be awesome swap the engine into a classic bug.
@@ThePaulv12 Yes. I had an XJ6 and my father an XJ12. I did the rear brakes and handbrake on mine the hard way but we dropped the rear subframe on the XJ12 which was, in the end, much better.
What is it with British engines and head studs? Years ago I owned a Saab 99 with a Triumph-made engine. The standard procedure to R&R the head on those engines was to use chisels, prybars, wedges, heat, and whatever else was needed to lift the head up about 3/8", at which time you'd use a hacksaw blade to cut off all the studs. It was assumed you'd destroy the head removing it, so one brand-new head and a bunch of studs later, you could put the engine back together!
Studs are used because they clamp better, race engine’s use studs. If you look aChevy race engines have studs, unfortunately after years of being together this happens especially when aluminum is involved.
I suspect a lot of these issues are down to a lack of correct maintenance over the years. Jaguar specified 60% Blucol antifreeze in the cooling system. Many fell into the hands of people who wouldn't be up for the cost of fluid changes at the specified frequency and quality. I pulled the head off an XJ6 that was about 19 years old at the time but well maintained and it was not a major problem.
@@ColinMill1 That's exactly the issue, antifreeze contains corrosion inhibitors, when used & changed correctly, these studs aren't an issue, the problem is, few people, especially Americans it seems, bother with scheduled maintenance, & this is the result. These lazy owners then spend the rest of their lives telling everyone their "horrific Jaguar (or various other manufacturers) experience" & it becomes folklore.. Same with Lucas electronics, its all way overblown.
In 85 I worked at a Jag dealer, remember a PDI taking over a week to complete. This car was an electrical nightmare. Turns out the cell phone bracket, an after thought, had been screwed right into the main wiring harness causing all kinds of cross connections. Yes, Lucas, the prince of darkness! Lucas makes refrigerator and that is the reason the Brits like warm beer!
You think jaguar was using foresight with those removable cam tray type sections? It'd be convient to get a new "tray" instead of a cylinder head. Also reduces the need to remove the cylinder head for certain services. Cool video man.
There's a design video called "The Jaguar V12 Engine" where the engineers are interviewed in 1971. The multi-part head is designed to simplify the casting and made it easier to clean the sand out of the casting. With a conventional cylinder head, it can be tricky to get the sand out of the intricate pockets of the water jackets in the head from the sand cores (as well as being tricky to make sure the sand cores that form the water jackets stay intact and don't move during casting).
Great video as always! Thanks to WD-40 for sponsoring Charles. They should set you up with a 55 gallon barrel of WD40, or a container full of wd40 big enough to lower an engine down into it.
Those rusty head studs are common on the XK series 6 cylinder. They sit in coolant jackets and they go way down into the block. My dad once had to scrap an entire engine, after a week of hanging the front of the car off the ground by the cylinder head, with soaking of various oils, he resorted to the porta-power. He gave up when the block broke.
it's not just the corrosion on the studs that makes them hard to get off it's more that the studs aren't 100% concentric with the bores they run in. It's sideways force from the studs which makes them bind as the head goes up.
fun fact about the Jaguar XJS. they had inboard rear brakes just like the h1 hummer! also something something rear subframe bushings. really interesting to look at if you ever get a chance in person!
Those viscous coupler fans have been destroying bonnets/hoods and coolant hoses for many years lol. Very important part of semi regular maintenance on any older vehicle. Love these types of videos, thank you so much. I had a 1966 Jaguar Mark 10 420G. Had a honking big 4.2 straight 6. Cool car but as you say...Lukas LOL. All the best good sir.
I converted my Jag XJ40 to an electric cooling fan and it is much better. Now I can hear the engine, not just wind noise. It also had a small impact on fuel economy.
@@alexandrecouture2462 oh wow, that's awesome! Nice car by the way. A nice stainless steel exhaust sounds so fantastic on those old Jag engines. All the best and enjoy that beautiful car :)
I had hoped it would have turned out to be the broken distributor cap as being the issue/noise. I've had it happen to me and a shop told me to get the timing chain changed as it "jumped time"...for $700. I was relieved that I took it home and found a $15 fix after my $150 (incorrect) diagnosis.
would love to see a mechanic i actually have faith and trust in on youtube teardown either the 1.4 from a 500 turbo/abarth or a 1.4 turbo from the chevy sonic/cruze. My abarth hasn't ran right for nearly 6 months now and no one can figure it out.
I am an old time english engine fan especially the Lotus Twincam and 907 engines but recently have got into VW. Really enjoyed all your vidoes on R32 engines as I work on my sons Mk4. I have a V8 TDI Touareg but those engines are not in the US so unlikely you can pull one of therm down but a V10 TDI would be nice as its a very unusual design for a road car and more based on the VAG Le Mans racing diesels design
I am not sure how rare Mazda MX-3's are outside of my country, but I am really interested in their v6 engines. It was then marketed as one of the smallest v6 production engines. I think it's called the Mazda K engine series. You have a few variations of the same engine block, with different displacements and parts. Mazda also engineered a VVT variant. It adjusted the air intake flow dynamically according to the engine's speed, instead of adjusting the valves. It would be really cool to see you take it apart and give your honest opinion!
@@brysonshires9742 Yes, you are correct! I think my message is a bit vague, lol. I meant that the K engines use a "Variable Resonance Induction System" (VRIS) instead of a VVT system :P
I have two XJ-S V12's now, one of them for 14 years. They're bulletproof and a joy when running right, and it's really not hard to make them run right! Just have to read "the book" by Kirby Palm. Sewing-machine smooth engines that can be revved to 7000 rpm without worry. The single biggest problem with these is the dumb mechanics who ruin them, which is what happened to this one. AnotherJaguar V12 destroyed by "repairs"... I have never seen one of these that needed any parts replaced. It only takes *competence* which is in short supply.
I`ve also had numerous Jags over the last 25 years & never had any issues, not broken down once. Simple maintenance indeed the key, & few people seem to bother with any of it, especially when they`ve got the car cheap from someone who`s done no servicing, then they do no servicing, & then blame the car when it inevitably goes bang..
14:04 On Japanese trucks (as far as I know because it’s all I work on). We call these a Cam Box. You can replace these completed with a cam without having to remove / replace the head because it is it’s own piece as some engines, the cam journals are part of the head. Saves a lot of time should anything cam or cam bearings fail.
Bit of a weird one for people in North America but here in Australia we have cars called Ford Falcons and most of them will have an Engine called "Barra" they range from an Inline 6 to a V8. They are big, reliable and can pump out a lot of power.
As immune to the black widow. Which was good because back in the day the medicine they used was not good for diabetics. Glad you survived. But actually the most venomous spider is the daddy long legs. It can easily kill a human if their fangs could pierce our skin
Of the ~2500 people that present to Emergency Departments in the US every year, about 6 die. Its more impressive that he drove home from the grocery store without being killed.
Note how the tapered collet allowed the pulley to come off easily. I was replacing the timing chain and guides on a 1999 X308 Jaguar. The so-called engineer who designed the motor decided to buck the trend of the last 100 years, and put the tapered collet around the other way. It would not shift, despite ever more violent applications of force and heat. Unable to use a puller on the harmonic balancer, because said idiot engineer put the puller holes on the outside of the rubber damper ring, so pulling just stretched the rubber. Finally I drilled out the locating key and it came off.
if you remove anymore jag heads, put plasticine around the studs forming a well and pour alloy wheel cleaner in and leave for a few days. you can also get a head removing tool although i made mine.
I think you'll find the Lucas labelled stuff is actually all Bosch. The ignition system has a GM HEI module in it too. The Lucas injection computer is Bosch and always was since the first injected V12. On the early injection system even the Lucas MAP sensor was a standard Bosch part. That AC compressor is an off the shelf Delco unit. I'm very surprised you haven't seen one before. The power steering pump is a Saginaw pump. BTW 11mm and 7/16ths are the same. I'm a professional mechanic and have to be conversant in both metric and imperial. It is such a non issue. I'm constantly amused by the incessant bitching about metric. It's ridiculous. I also hear people bitch about imperial. I can't understand it TBH.
@Hamish-y2c Only on the early HE engines. The pre HE V12 of the 1970s only had a single coil. The reason the HEs had dual coils was low resistance coils didn't exist yet, so they used dual coils to get the spark energy required to run a high comp (first HE V12 were about 12:1 - later reduced to 11 ish to 1) V12 at 6500rpm - a traditional firing coil and a non firing coil that had the secondary output terminal potted and the primary terminals were wired in parallel. After about late 1985 low resistance coils became mass produced and the ignition reverted back to single coil. You can retro fit a modern single coil. There are advantages over the old dual coil setup - greater output, less electrical connections, less failure points, much cheaper, easy availability of spare parts. In the 1990s there was the Marelli ignition system and that quickly disappeared. IIRC that had 2x coils. The distributor rotor would fail and one bank would stop firing. Because a V12 is 2x banks of 1,5,3,6,2,4 or essentially two inline 6 engines the non firing bank would go undetected. The firing bank still ran and the engine was still smooth. Unfortunately the injection system was still supplying fuel and the pistons on that bank still pumping air. Air, fuel and hot catalytic convertors in the exhaust don't mix (well they do actually LOL) so some cars burned.
I don’t have any Jag horror stories but I have many Lucas horror stories. I had a 1972 TR-6. Lucas-nightmare. Never seen electrical connectors where it was basically a cup and a button held together with a rubber boot…….which of course dry rotted
Love Love Love this! I just bought a V12 XJS and now I know what she looks like inside - question though, was the injector service related to the head bolt failure or just a coincidence? Did I miss that part of the video perhaps?
Having done the injector hoses on these, that stud is from an injector hold down plate. The stud goes into the intake manifold and when removing the nuts some of the studs can back out. Also prior work on these cars can mean over tightened studs that pull threads out of the aluminum manifold. Had to helicoil two of em. But 24 of these in total, along with a vast mess of other bits. I would say that each injector uses two of these for a hold down and one missing would be obvious and also may cause the injector to not fully seat. My guess as a result is it was lost, fell into a hidden area in the valley and down an open plug hole. As the engine bay in an xjs can be a massive black hole for small bits that are dropped, im betting a 1/4-20 bolt was substituted after the stud was not found. Owner thought it must have fallen into the engine bay but alas it went into an open plug hole. Definitely tough deal on that one! These engines really are good at hiding dropped hardware and the spark plugs are right near the injectors in the V. So good lesson for anyone in future, dont leave plugs out on these cars any longer than needed, and account for all dropped bits in the V. And in worst case, bore scope is your best friend. For the matter, a bit of luck, strong flexible magnet and some experience with boardwalk claw games and you may win a very frightening fishing expedition.
One channel I enjoy watching on occasion is the precision transmission shop from Amarillo Texas, he takes down the automatic transmissions and points out the failure spots. Might be interesting to see a comparison to a VW front wheel drive automatic. Nice job on the v12.
Im glad im not the only one who looks at old parts and thinks of all the things i could make out of them. I have a valvetronic eccentric shaft sitting and waiting for me to come up with an idea.
Isn't "Jaquar Horror Story" redundant? Or was that just when they came with Lucas electronics? That's one hulking mass of an engine. Laughed my a$$ off when the crank pulley practically fell off the crank.
Not a horror story from working on a jag but a horror story involving a jag. I'm from Northern Maine and I spent a summer in Texas with family during college. The family car was a 2008ish jag xj and shortly after I arrived, the AC stopped working. I went from a very cold Maine winter/spring to a very hot summer in Texas. Nearly every day was a record breaking high temp
The cylinder head comes apart in 2 pieces allowing you to replace the cam bearings without replacing the head. :) BMW did this also in all the m54 motors, also I have a motorcycle engine you can have if you want to pick it up in charlotte next time you are here. Just ask Paul for my contact info
Can definitely relate to not being able to leave things alone if they bug me! Although I am sad to see a good V12 go. They're not exactly getting more common in this day and age of environmental regulations...
Love those old body style Jags, and now fully understand why so many people were putting 5.0L Mustang engines in them. Maybe if I ever decide to punish my self enough, I'll stick to the XJ6 of that era. lol
Many put Chevy small block 350 in these, because they already used a GM automatic transmission. It was mostly because many people didn't had the knowledge to fix the V12.
Have you ever done a rotary teardown on the channel? Would e sick. What about the 1.8(?) V6 from mazda. A nostalgic one for me would be the big ass freaking v8 petrol engine my dad had in his 80's land rover defender 110. Man that thing was impressive to me. Of only we had it now, i could have helped him work in it.
Id love too see him tackel some old Land Rover stuff like 300tdi's and 3.9s, 4.0s, and 4.6s. Supper happy to some Jaguar stuff. Always want to learn more!
The heads always seize on, you'd be amazed at how seized they can be. we've had them so stuck that after a few days of lube, an engine hoist and car lift chained on you get a few mm of gap then had to cut the studs.
A buddy called me and said he would soak them, loosen the nuts, rattle the studs with an air hammer, then leave it overnight with the engine hoist like you mentioned.
Edison invented the light bulb. Lucas put it out. The curse of all things British, especially motorcycles with all that wiring inside the headlight bucket. The v-12 water pump is a known problem. Inside that Lucas module is a GM HEi module. A simple fix. Corroded water passages lead to head gasketr failure. The flat head design leads much to be desired performance wise.
I'm very familiar with Lucas electronics. A friend had a MG-TF and a XKE. He got both running and flipped them because they weren't worth the effort of doing more. I bought his decals for his toolbox that said "Lucas invented the intermittent wiper" and "Lucas switch-dim, flicker and off".
I'm not an oldtimer as far as I know, but here in the frozen outer rim of northern Europe cars tend to be on the road much longer. Thus, in my early twenties arount the turn of the century I did come across Lucas. Oldtimers here did talk about the prince of darkness. It wasn't Ozzy.
😂 thats why you use the Jaguar v12 cylinder head removal device... Its a plate you attach to the head and camshaft assembly and it slowly jacks the head off the block...😮😅
John Lucas: "PRINCE OF DARKNESS" Brock Yates, a great writer for Car and Driver Magazine once was invited to a dinner at the White House. He made the statement: "I snatched that up faster than Lucas wipers will quit in a rainstorm." Next month John Lucas company sent a letter to Brock complaining about Brock's comment and told him that Lucas made the electronics for all Rolls Royce jet engines. Brock replied: "I told my secretary to never book me a flight on a plane that uses Rolls Royce engines."
Brought back memories working on Jags in the late 80s and early 90s in Australia. Common problem with the heads corroding onto the block. W10 engine would be good to see torn down.
So you attach an electric motor to the crank-shaft and have it spin the engine over (slowly) to display the 12 cylinders going in and out? as a coffee table?
I owned a v12 XJS for 16 years and toured all over Europe, never ever let me down , only part replaced was high pressure steering hose on the car. Regularly maintained by Jaguar
That was a great break down.you mentioned that's a whole aluminum engine I was wondering why do they make some engines with a cast iron engine block but has a aluminum cylinder head bolted to them.
Hey Charles, let’s go bigger!! How about a truck engine tear down? From a massive fan in the UK 🇬🇧. Also I drive a 2019 SEAT Leon ST 190ps 2litre turbo. Is there a video anywhere on your channel where you have worked on this engine type? I’m very interested to see how it all works. All the best 👍🏼
My parents had that very same Jaguar. They loved the cars and we had different models through the decades. As a kid I remember the salesman's pitch: remember all those problems you had with your old Jag? Guess what...."most" of those issues have been fixed in this new model. So shall I put you down for a new order....lol. I wish I was making this up. I still love them and think they defined elegance and class; not so much engineering or reliability.
Joseph Lucas: Prince of Darkness . Why do the English drink warm beer? Lucas made fridges. . When Lucas finally shut up shop, they sold one of the factories to Dyson. Now, the factory makes something that well and truly sucks.
So jag story time:
Used to work at a Jaguar dealership and out back in the smoking area there was a v12 half disassembled not too far off looking than the one at the end of this video…. It was there because it was the “pissed off Jaguar mechanic punching bag”. Had been replaced years before I started working there and left out for whenever any of the mechanics got angry at some stupid Jaguar design of some kind, we could go out and beat on it with whatever tool or other engine part we had around and take some edge off. It had axles punched through pistons, tons of hammer marks, air chiseled chunks taken out of it, marks from being beat by pry bars, etc.
Cool story bro, had to be there.
nobody cares
Your mom@@diranhayrabedian3386
@@diranhayrabedian3386 You cared enough to comment.
would just like to state that I care.
@diranhayrabedian3386
Charles cares
He asked for Jaguar stories in the video
Seems he doesn’t care about you tho…
These are great engines. They are bulletproof - but I guess not if the owner dropped a stud in the engine. I have torn mine apart - new injectors, Teflon wiring, better coil, and it runs so smoothly. As others have said - these are LeMans winning engines in the late 80s - knocking Porsche down the ranks. The HE engine shown here has an 11.5-1 compression ratio. Those heads have the combustion chamber closed off around the spark plug to create a compact flame front. Very slick.
th-cam.com/video/M9I7GWllPFY/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=Sciflyer
Yes they are, I have personally raced two. Even Ferrari admitted they were good.
Had no idea of the pedigree, etc. Thanks for the info.
You cant use any V12 Jaguar because these engines are made fom material made in India and drop valve seats any 20.000 KM!
You couldn’t be more wrong. They only drop valve seats when overheated. @@Schlipperschlopper
Jaguar made 160,000 V12 engines over a 25 year period, a legendary power plant, just a shame some owners don't maintain them properly.
Excellent job there Charles. How about a VW V10 diesel teardown/rebuild?
This is THE most requested!
I agree my inner love for the Touareg demands this from you!
v12 tdi from a Q7 would be cool too
@@HumbleMechanic hey, greetings from Scotland.im a lover of Volvo's,what about a tear down of the 4.4 v8 engine?😊
Jag story: I once wanted to take off the cylinder head of my 4,2L 6-cyl. XJ6. When trying to lift off the head with a hoist, I eventually found the front wheels off the ground. It was the same issue as on your V12: The headstuds, which run thru the water jacket, were rusted up and seized to the bores in the head. It took me two days with a hydraulic duck-beak style spreader to wiggle it upward, millimeter for millimeter. Man, was I pissed. Now I know there is a special tool for those heads, a kind of puller. It is a steel plate which bolts to the studs of the camshaft caps. Then bolts are screwed into the plate, they press against the head studs, forcing the head off.
I made this tool for pulling V12 heads and then I made a similar one for pulling the heads on the 6 cylinders. They’re almost always stuck.
I have the same story. Unbelievably stupid design.
Actually there are places on the engine block that one can put a simple hydraulic jack on. Leave the manifolds on, and just work the head off the stud forest one corner at a time.
yep, i made one, god knows what happened to it....
Cam chains are the way the modern engine is totally crap compared to engines in the 80s. The way to destroy your car or van.
This video is gold. We need so more oddball engine tear down videos, like this one! Thanks Charles!
if you like engine teardowns like this, check out I Do Cars. He does a teardown every Saturday night. Very entertaining channel.
Great engines, short stroke designed for racing. Just lovely these days with a manual box conversion.
The Jaguar XJS Group A is a wild sounding race car! It's so loud compared to other Group A touring cars (and the tone is excellent too of course).
You said you're too young to have had a proper Lucas experience, Hell, those of us that are old enough to have been around them new have never had a proper Lucas experience either, because they never worked properly.
Lucas electronics were so good they could get five functions out of a two position switch- On, Off, flickering, intermittent, and half power.
Lucas headlight switch positions: Off, Low, High, and Maybe.
Lucas ignition systems saved their owners thousands if fuel costs... because you can't burn fuel if the car won't start.
People say Ford invented intermittent windshield wipers, Those were actually invented by Lucas. Ford, however was the first to do it on purpose.
Lucas had cylinder deactivation WAY before anyone else...
hahahah aFAIR POINT!
Lucas- get home before dark.
Why do the British drink warm beer? Because their refrigerators are made by Lucas.
If your jag isn’t leaking oil- are you sure it has oil in it.
Land Rover- making mechanics out of drivers since 1948.
Lucas wiring harness replacement smoke is available in case you’ve accidentally let the smoke out of your original wiring.
Land Rover- we will take you anywhere, and leave you anywhere.
I’ve found Lucas wiring itself to be fairly robust. The plastics inside the switches has a tendency to crack and that makes the switches fail. The switches also use contacts and so carbon up over time leading to failures. Most circuits in British cars do not use relays so full amperage is passing thru switches instead of relays- leading to failure. Lucas also did not use waterproof connectors hence more corrosion and failures.
A common phrase here in England : Lucas , The Prince of Darkness .
@@orbassasin shocking that in a damp country they didn’t think to use waterproof connectors. Makes no sense.
WHAT DO YOU EXPET FROM A FREEMASONRY COMPANY?????
DANARM WAS 100% FRAUD TOO
The trays under the camshafts are meant to hold an oil bath on the cam when the engine is shut off. When the engine is started the cams are already sitting in an oil bath. As the engine runs the oil is pumped up to tray, excess spills over back to sump. When engine is stopped what's in the tray stays until engine is run again.
When you got the first one off with just a prybar, I thought, wow, luckiest guy in the world, then the second one wouldn't come off no matter what and I felt better. That is normal. Welcome to the club! There is actually a special tool to help with it but it can still take days.
Ferrari V12's from the 60s/70s are similar in getting the heads off. They used the steel studs to locate the head so they're all close tolerance holes, until a little galvanic corrosion happens, then they're no clearance holes. Last 330 GTC I did, I had to machine special tools that bolted in place of the valve gear and pushed on the studs. Still took several days of heat, penetrating oil, and other gentle persuasion to get them off.
@@That_Handle sure you could do that if you wanted to destroy the head and the block.
@@rennkafer13 I'm curious about your opinion on something? In your view, which was the better engine? The Ferrari Colombo V12 or the Jaguar V12? Also, which was easier to work on?
Did Jaguar ever release a quad cam 4 valve version of their V12?
@@ivanjulian2532 never did much with Jag V-12's as far as disassembly personally. As far as which is better, both can be built and work well, from the factory I'd give the edge to Ferrari.
i had a 1971 xj6 and it was great = put a manual choke - rebuilt carbys and distributor - some brakes and suspension = 130 mph just great = rebuilt engine - 270 bhp and then got a 1968 MK 2 daimler v8 250 sedan = super engine sound - bullet proof motoring !
Congrats on not letting the second half of that cylinder head defeat you! 😆
that engine is totally worth saving
It was. Not any longer.
@@thecampchaoschronicles9567 A bit hard to watch at the end and not a terribly difficult fix.
Dude is a hack. Putting all those tool marks on rebuildable aluminum heads and block. If the block and heads were cracked that would be a different story.
Very good friend of mine used to race the XKE/E-Type back in the day... He used to run a worked-over 3.8. Bored out to something closer to 3.9, specialist pistons and rods, replacement forged steel crank, courtesy of a contact who operated a "Dunbar & Cook" Crankmaster... Swapped out the standard SUs for a set of triple Webers (45 DCOEs IIRC) on a specialist, one-off manifold. Good for 9000rpm and peak power at around 8k. Which might not sound like much in comparison with modern engines, but considering this was all based on 1960s design, not bad at all. And he went with a tuned up 3.8 over the 4.2 as the latter had all sorts of overheating issues when pushed hard.
Despite the higher states of tune the engines were largely bulletproof - the "weak link" was either the gearbox (which my friend described as "agricultural" / "better suited to a tractor") and, until replaced, the wheels. He started racing on original, center-spinner spoked wheels... until he found spokes literally pulled through the rims where he was cornering so hard. Epic.
A story I heard somewhere was that when Ford were in process of buying Jaguar in late 80s, some Ford people came to look at one of Jaguars factories in UK, probably in Coventry area... and found a lathe that dated back to 1896 still being used to produce one particular part....
That foamy coolants is from mixing different types of coolants together. I work on transports and I’ve seen it multiple times. Drivers top up with whatever, next thing you know it’s foaming out of the reservoir, making a massive mess
Yep.
I own a 1976 Jaguar XJ12. Its V12 expired in 1994 at 131,000 miles. It was like $10,000 at that time ($20,000 and higher now) to have a proper rebuild, so it got lumped with a JTR 350 Chevy and TH350 tans. That Jag V12 is an almost 800 lb. engine - my car lost about 400 lbs. weight in the conversion. Its a pretty standard 350, so it made roughly the same power. With the conversion weight loss its acceleration improved and it got better gas mileage. Jaguar people hate my car when they find out it now has a Chevy 350 engine - they refer to it as a lumped car.
Dang that almost raises much as a Cummins engine
These cars are actually what made me work at a dealership in the first place. I worked at the corner garage (now a pizza place) and we had an unusual number of old (at the time not all that old) Jags in the area. That and a service writer that just couldn't say no) brought a lot of these into the shop. These things drove me to a Hyundai dealer (at the time just a few steps above a used Yugo) but it was still better than trying to do a set of the inboard rear brakes on an XJ 6/12.
And do a rotary. And if you truly want to be awesome swap the engine into a classic bug.
It's not the brakes, it's the hand brakes that are difficult.
@@ThePaulv12 Yes. I had an XJ6 and my father an XJ12. I did the rear brakes and handbrake on mine the hard way but we dropped the rear subframe on the XJ12 which was, in the end, much better.
I openly giggled more times than I care to admit. your commentary is gold.
What is it with British engines and head studs? Years ago I owned a Saab 99 with a Triumph-made engine. The standard procedure to R&R the head on those engines was to use chisels, prybars, wedges, heat, and whatever else was needed to lift the head up about 3/8", at which time you'd use a hacksaw blade to cut off all the studs. It was assumed you'd destroy the head removing it, so one brand-new head and a bunch of studs later, you could put the engine back together!
Studs are used because they clamp better, race engine’s use studs. If you look aChevy race engines have studs, unfortunately after years of being together this happens especially when aluminum is involved.
The engine was originally designed as a 4 cam multivalve short stroke race engine by Sir William Lyons inspired by the Rolls Royce Merlin .
I suspect a lot of these issues are down to a lack of correct maintenance over the years. Jaguar specified 60% Blucol antifreeze in the cooling system. Many fell into the hands of people who wouldn't be up for the cost of fluid changes at the specified frequency and quality. I pulled the head off an XJ6 that was about 19 years old at the time but well maintained and it was not a major problem.
@@ColinMill1 That's exactly the issue, antifreeze contains corrosion inhibitors, when used & changed correctly, these studs aren't an issue, the problem is, few people, especially Americans it seems, bother with scheduled maintenance, & this is the result. These lazy owners then spend the rest of their lives telling everyone their "horrific Jaguar (or various other manufacturers) experience" & it becomes folklore.. Same with Lucas electronics, its all way overblown.
Send it to Tom Walkinshaw Racing. Powerful reliable and will make the hairs on the back of your neck stand up with the sound.
In 85 I worked at a Jag dealer, remember a PDI taking over a week to complete. This car was an electrical nightmare. Turns out the cell phone bracket, an after thought, had been screwed right into the main wiring harness causing all kinds of cross connections. Yes, Lucas, the prince of darkness! Lucas makes refrigerator and that is the reason the Brits like warm beer!
Yes a BL Jag. I have a ford jaag a 94 XJ40 no problems
I would like to see a rebuild of that engine.
Not this but still :-)
th-cam.com/video/N2zg8fjwtIA/w-d-xo.html
@@kjellmesch8060 Nice.. thanks!
You think jaguar was using foresight with those removable cam tray type sections? It'd be convient to get a new "tray" instead of a cylinder head. Also reduces the need to remove the cylinder head for certain services. Cool video man.
Foresight is not the word I would use when I see this engine
What is your speciality. @@aygwm
There's a design video called "The Jaguar V12 Engine" where the engineers are interviewed in 1971. The multi-part head is designed to simplify the casting and made it easier to clean the sand out of the casting. With a conventional cylinder head, it can be tricky to get the sand out of the intricate pockets of the water jackets in the head from the sand cores (as well as being tricky to make sure the sand cores that form the water jackets stay intact and don't move during casting).
Great video as always! Thanks to WD-40 for sponsoring Charles. They should set you up with a 55 gallon barrel of WD40, or a container full of wd40 big enough to lower an engine down into it.
Those rusty head studs are common on the XK series 6 cylinder. They sit in coolant jackets and they go way down into the block. My dad once had to scrap an entire engine, after a week of hanging the front of the car off the ground by the cylinder head, with soaking of various oils, he resorted to the porta-power. He gave up when the block broke.
I have a inline-6 Jaguar XJ6 from 1991 and this engine is amazing, built like a tank. The name is AJ6.
Brilliant engines
it's not just the corrosion on the studs that makes them hard to get off it's more that the studs aren't 100% concentric with the bores they run in. It's sideways force from the studs which makes them bind as the head goes up.
fun fact about the Jaguar XJS. they had inboard rear brakes just like the h1 hummer! also something something rear subframe bushings. really interesting to look at if you ever get a chance in person!
And just like the XK's before them.
First production use was in the original S type. Went in to Mk10, E Type and XJ6 / XJ12
@timmiller2460 S type came out the same year as the XKE, 1963... so concurrent.
@@rennkafer13 Just checking it went E Type, Mk10 then S Type. What was on my mind was that the first test mules were Mk2s but I got mixed up! 🤣
*_"...and the second cylinder head will take way less time to get off because now we know how it's done...."_*
Those viscous coupler fans have been destroying bonnets/hoods and coolant hoses for many years lol. Very important part of semi regular maintenance on any older vehicle. Love these types of videos, thank you so much. I had a 1966 Jaguar Mark 10 420G. Had a honking big 4.2 straight 6. Cool car but as you say...Lukas LOL. All the best good sir.
I converted my Jag XJ40 to an electric cooling fan and it is much better. Now I can hear the engine, not just wind noise. It also had a small impact on fuel economy.
@@alexandrecouture2462 oh wow, that's awesome! Nice car by the way. A nice stainless steel exhaust sounds so fantastic on those old Jag engines. All the best and enjoy that beautiful car :)
@@V8.77 Thank you!
I had hoped it would have turned out to be the broken distributor cap as being the issue/noise. I've had it happen to me and a shop told me to get the timing chain changed as it "jumped time"...for $700. I was relieved that I took it home and found a $15 fix after my $150 (incorrect) diagnosis.
That engine is so big it almost looks like it's been digitally enlarged in post-process.
5:10 I don't think the water pump is secured by quite enough bolts.
Hahah they prob still leak
i drove a 7 litre crank swapped with fuel injection XJS - wow pulling power - they will rev to 7,000 rpm with a tickle !
would love to see a mechanic i actually have faith and trust in on youtube teardown either the 1.4 from a 500 turbo/abarth or a 1.4 turbo from the chevy sonic/cruze. My abarth hasn't ran right for nearly 6 months now and no one can figure it out.
The front crank pulley was held on by a collet, very much like ones used in routers to fix the bits.
Charles looked at that cylinder head and was like "don't make me angry. you wouldn't like me when i'm angry...." and it popped right off! kudos sir!
I am an old time english engine fan especially the Lotus Twincam and 907 engines but recently have got into VW. Really enjoyed all your vidoes on R32 engines as I work on my sons Mk4. I have a V8 TDI Touareg but those engines are not in the US so unlikely you can pull one of therm down but a V10 TDI would be nice as its a very unusual design for a road car and more based on the VAG Le Mans racing diesels design
Extra points for using “borked” in a disassembly video! I’ll take the valve covers for wall art 😃
I am not sure how rare Mazda MX-3's are outside of my country,
but I am really interested in their v6 engines.
It was then marketed as one of the smallest v6 production engines.
I think it's called the Mazda K engine series.
You have a few variations of the same engine block,
with different displacements and parts.
Mazda also engineered a VVT variant.
It adjusted the air intake flow dynamically according to the engine's speed,
instead of adjusting the valves.
It would be really cool to see you take it apart and give your honest opinion!
I don't believe the kl's got vvt. Only the later duratecs, right?
Check out the suicide mx3 if you haven't already
@@brysonshires9742 Yes, you are correct!
I think my message is a bit vague, lol.
I meant that the K engines use a "Variable Resonance Induction System" (VRIS) instead of a VVT system :P
@@tomremeeus6069 the vris in my probe works perfectly
Lucas...prince of darkness. The reason Brits drink warm beer.
Your a asshole to..
5:22 wrong coolant (no coolant) for an aluminium block/head. Also engine and ancillaries worth a lot in parts.
So it's Lucas' fault that someone smote the distributor cap? Do remember that a 7 litre version of that engine won at Le Mans in both 1988 and 1990.
Parts like the power steering pump and A/C compressor are GM AC-Delco parts.
I have two XJ-S V12's now, one of them for 14 years. They're bulletproof and a joy when running right, and it's really not hard to make them run right! Just have to read "the book" by Kirby Palm. Sewing-machine smooth engines that can be revved to 7000 rpm without worry. The single biggest problem with these is the dumb mechanics who ruin them, which is what happened to this one. AnotherJaguar V12 destroyed by "repairs"... I have never seen one of these that needed any parts replaced. It only takes *competence* which is in short supply.
I`ve also had numerous Jags over the last 25 years & never had any issues, not broken down once. Simple maintenance indeed the key, & few people seem to bother with any of it, especially when they`ve got the car cheap from someone who`s done no servicing, then they do no servicing, & then blame the car when it inevitably goes bang..
I used to make good money as a tech with Jaguar...I lived those cars! Water pump paid like 14 hours! Head studs were a party too!
Hell yea!!
14:04 On Japanese trucks (as far as I know because it’s all I work on). We call these a Cam Box. You can replace these completed with a cam without having to remove / replace the head because it is it’s own piece as some engines, the cam journals are part of the head. Saves a lot of time should anything cam or cam bearings fail.
I enjoy watching all tear downs, but I'd really be interested in a W 12, or any W!
Just recently did one...
That Harrison A-6 compressor will make snow. GM used them for decades. (Harrison/Frigidaire - both owned by GM at one point)
Bit of a weird one for people in North America but here in Australia we have cars called Ford Falcons and most of them will have an Engine called "Barra" they range from an Inline 6 to a V8. They are big, reliable and can pump out a lot of power.
No one going to mention that he survived a black widow spider and lived. The 2nd most dangerous spider in the world
As immune to the black widow. Which was good because back in the day the medicine they used was not good for diabetics.
Glad you survived.
But actually the most venomous spider is the daddy long legs. It can easily kill a human if their fangs could pierce our skin
Right! 😳
They can’t bite humans, last time I checked our skin is too thick or their mouth isn’t strong enough to bite us. There still highly venomous tho
Of the ~2500 people that present to Emergency Departments in the US every year, about 6 die. Its more impressive that he drove home from the grocery store without being killed.
@@davidweeks6090wow! He's like a superhero
Man what a shame! Hearing it fail must have been such a bad feeling. Great video though!
That pulley was hilarious,
Expecting a minute or two of impacting
Reality it came out instantly lol
Note how the tapered collet allowed the pulley to come off easily. I was replacing the timing chain and guides on a 1999 X308 Jaguar. The so-called engineer who designed the motor decided to buck the trend of the last 100 years, and put the tapered collet around the other way. It would not shift, despite ever more violent applications of force and heat. Unable to use a puller on the harmonic balancer, because said idiot engineer put the puller holes on the outside of the rubber damper ring, so pulling just stretched the rubber. Finally I drilled out the locating key and it came off.
if you remove anymore jag heads, put plasticine around the studs forming a well and pour alloy wheel cleaner in and leave for a few days. you can also get a head removing tool although i made mine.
That’s a good idea!
@@HumbleMechanic it's that good, it works. i read it somewhere that an aircraft tech recommended doing it. worked a treat for me.
I think you'll find the Lucas labelled stuff is actually all Bosch. The ignition system has a GM HEI module in it too. The Lucas injection computer is Bosch and always was since the first injected V12. On the early injection system even the Lucas MAP sensor was a standard Bosch part.
That AC compressor is an off the shelf Delco unit. I'm very surprised you haven't seen one before. The power steering pump is a Saginaw pump.
BTW 11mm and 7/16ths are the same. I'm a professional mechanic and have to be conversant in both metric and imperial. It is such a non issue. I'm constantly amused by the incessant bitching about metric. It's ridiculous. I also hear people bitch about imperial. I can't understand it TBH.
The car has two ignition coils both Lucas very reliable and we’re used on millions of cars.
@Hamish-y2c Only on the early HE engines. The pre HE V12 of the 1970s only had a single coil.
The reason the HEs had dual coils was low resistance coils didn't exist yet, so they used dual coils to get the spark energy required to run a high comp (first HE V12 were about 12:1 - later reduced to 11 ish to 1) V12 at 6500rpm - a traditional firing coil and a non firing coil that had the secondary output terminal potted and the primary terminals were wired in parallel.
After about late 1985 low resistance coils became mass produced and the ignition reverted back to single coil.
You can retro fit a modern single coil. There are advantages over the old dual coil setup - greater output, less electrical connections, less failure points, much cheaper, easy availability of spare parts.
In the 1990s there was the Marelli ignition system and that quickly disappeared. IIRC that had 2x coils.
The distributor rotor would fail and one bank would stop firing. Because a V12 is 2x banks of 1,5,3,6,2,4 or essentially two inline 6 engines the non firing bank would go undetected. The firing bank still ran and the engine was still smooth. Unfortunately the injection system was still supplying fuel and the pistons on that bank still pumping air. Air, fuel and hot catalytic convertors in the exhaust don't mix (well they do actually LOL) so some cars burned.
The fact it has semi-beefy double row timing chain almost makes me like it..
I don’t have any Jag horror stories but I have many Lucas horror stories. I had a 1972 TR-6. Lucas-nightmare. Never seen electrical connectors where it was basically a cup and a button held together with a rubber boot…….which of course dry rotted
Ahh you gotta love these fine engines from the JAAAAAAAAGG
ifykyk
Love Love Love this! I just bought a V12 XJS and now I know what she looks like inside - question though, was the injector service related to the head bolt failure or just a coincidence? Did I miss that part of the video perhaps?
I think they broke a stud and it fell during maintenance.
Hi! If you have a Jag V12, the channel to take a look is Living with a Classic. Adam is the guy for anything Jag V12.
Having done the injector hoses on these, that stud is from an injector hold down plate. The stud goes into the intake manifold and when removing the nuts some of the studs can back out. Also prior work on these cars can mean over tightened studs that pull threads out of the aluminum manifold. Had to helicoil two of em.
But 24 of these in total, along with a vast mess of other bits.
I would say that each injector uses two of these for a hold down and one missing would be obvious and also may cause the injector to not fully seat.
My guess as a result is it was lost, fell into a hidden area in the valley and down an open plug hole. As the engine bay in an xjs can be a massive black hole for small bits that are dropped, im betting a 1/4-20 bolt was substituted after the stud was not found. Owner thought it must have fallen into the engine bay but alas it went into an open plug hole. Definitely tough deal on that one!
These engines really are good at hiding dropped hardware and the spark plugs are right near the injectors in the V. So good lesson for anyone in future, dont leave plugs out on these cars any longer than needed, and account for all dropped bits in the V.
And in worst case, bore scope is your best friend. For the matter, a bit of luck, strong flexible magnet and some experience with boardwalk claw games and you may win a very frightening fishing expedition.
One channel I enjoy watching on occasion is the precision transmission shop from Amarillo Texas, he takes down the automatic transmissions and points out the failure spots. Might be interesting to see a comparison to a VW front wheel drive automatic. Nice job on the v12.
Im glad im not the only one who looks at old parts and thinks of all the things i could make out of them. I have a valvetronic eccentric shaft sitting and waiting for me to come up with an idea.
Lucas refrigerators: why the Brits drink warm beer.
Brown ale is cellar temperature no warm 😂😂, larger is cold, and lucas do not make fridges or at least I have never seen one anywhere 😂😂
Charles what is the problem with the VW 1.4 L engine you mentioned about bolts loosening ? Never heard that before and I work on European cars .
The bolts in the cam variaters back out.
Isn't "Jaquar Horror Story" redundant? Or was that just when they came with Lucas electronics? That's one hulking mass of an engine. Laughed my a$$ off when the crank pulley practically fell off the crank.
Not a horror story from working on a jag but a horror story involving a jag. I'm from Northern Maine and I spent a summer in Texas with family during college. The family car was a 2008ish jag xj and shortly after I arrived, the AC stopped working. I went from a very cold Maine winter/spring to a very hot summer in Texas. Nearly every day was a record breaking high temp
You know things are serious when the hat goes backwards.
Hahahha facts!
The cylinder head comes apart in 2 pieces allowing you to replace the cam bearings without replacing the head. :) BMW did this also in all the m54 motors, also I have a motorcycle engine you can have if you want to pick it up in charlotte next time you are here. Just ask Paul for my contact info
Best part of the video was you winning the stuck head battle at the end!!
Hahha thanks
Loving watching your videos. Definitely becoming a regular viewer
Can definitely relate to not being able to leave things alone if they bug me! Although I am sad to see a good V12 go. They're not exactly getting more common in this day and age of environmental regulations...
Love those old body style Jags, and now fully understand why so many people were putting 5.0L Mustang engines in them. Maybe if I ever decide to punish my self enough, I'll stick to the XJ6 of that era. lol
Many put Chevy small block 350 in these, because they already used a GM automatic transmission. It was mostly because many people didn't had the knowledge to fix the V12.
That is a cool looking valve cover!
Awesome video! That engine was pretty stout. Next teardown should be an ls engine
Have you ever done a rotary teardown on the channel? Would e sick. What about the 1.8(?) V6 from mazda.
A nostalgic one for me would be the big ass freaking v8 petrol engine my dad had in his 80's land rover defender 110. Man that thing was impressive to me. Of only we had it now, i could have helped him work in it.
Im so glad i turned down that job at the classic jag shop
Can't blame us Brits for the US made Harrison A/C compressor. We didn't even have A/C back then and bought it from you.
Hahahah fair point
I was a jaguar mechanic I love these v-12 motors.job security at dealership pay check every week.
Id love too see him tackel some old Land Rover stuff like 300tdi's and 3.9s, 4.0s, and 4.6s. Supper happy to some Jaguar stuff. Always want to learn more!
The heads always seize on, you'd be amazed at how seized they can be. we've had them so stuck that after a few days of lube, an engine hoist and car lift chained on you get a few mm of gap then had to cut the studs.
A buddy called me and said he would soak them, loosen the nuts, rattle the studs with an air hammer, then leave it overnight with the engine hoist like you mentioned.
Edison invented the light bulb. Lucas put it out. The curse of all things British, especially motorcycles with all that wiring inside the headlight bucket. The v-12 water pump is a known problem. Inside that Lucas module is a GM HEi module. A simple fix. Corroded water passages lead to head gasketr failure. The flat head design leads much to be desired performance wise.
I'm very familiar with Lucas electronics. A friend had a MG-TF and a XKE. He got both running and flipped them because they weren't worth the effort of doing more. I bought his decals for his toolbox that said "Lucas invented the intermittent wiper" and "Lucas switch-dim, flicker and off".
I have met Americans who can’t fix Delco either.
When you’re having a bad day just go out and beat on the Jag motor 😂
I'm not an oldtimer as far as I know, but here in the frozen outer rim of northern Europe cars tend to be on the road much longer. Thus, in my early twenties arount the turn of the century I did come across Lucas. Oldtimers here did talk about the prince of darkness. It wasn't Ozzy.
😂 thats why you use the Jaguar v12 cylinder head removal device... Its a plate you attach to the head and camshaft assembly and it slowly jacks the head off the block...😮😅
These are HUGE engines. They can be bored/stroked out to over 9 liters, and the engine without accessories is well over 700 pounds.
Now THAT is cool
John Lucas: "PRINCE OF DARKNESS" Brock Yates, a great writer for Car and Driver Magazine once was invited to a dinner at the White House. He made the statement: "I snatched that up faster than Lucas wipers will quit in a rainstorm." Next month John Lucas company sent a letter to Brock complaining about Brock's comment and told him that Lucas made the electronics for all Rolls Royce jet engines. Brock replied: "I told my secretary to never book me a flight on a plane that uses Rolls Royce engines."
Brought back memories working on Jags in the late 80s and early 90s in Australia. Common problem with the heads corroding onto the block.
W10 engine would be good to see torn down.
So you attach an electric motor to the crank-shaft and have it spin the engine over (slowly) to display the 12 cylinders going in and out? as a coffee table?
That would be awesome!!! Come get it and make it happen. Lol
I owned a v12 XJS for 16 years and toured all over Europe, never ever let me down , only part replaced was high pressure steering hose on the car. Regularly maintained by Jaguar
I drove mine every day No problems.
V12 J, that's huge and powerful engine, Charles...
The Jaguar V12 short stroke was designed as a race engine with plenty of tolerance for tweaking.
That was a great break down.you mentioned that's a whole aluminum engine I was wondering why do they make some engines with a cast iron engine block but has a aluminum cylinder head bolted to them.
Hey Charles, let’s go bigger!! How about a truck engine tear down? From a massive fan in the UK 🇬🇧.
Also I drive a 2019 SEAT Leon ST 190ps 2litre turbo. Is there a video anywhere on your channel where you have worked on this engine type? I’m very interested to see how it all works. All the best 👍🏼
THE CAM carrier is like that so you don't need to replace the entire head for cam bearing issue.
That’s super cool
Thats a Frigidaire A6 A/C compressor same on that's on my Chevelle.
My parents had that very same Jaguar. They loved the cars and we had different models through the decades. As a kid I remember the salesman's pitch: remember all those problems you had with your old Jag? Guess what...."most" of those issues have been fixed in this new model. So shall I put you down for a new order....lol. I wish I was making this up.
I still love them and think they defined elegance and class; not so much engineering or reliability.
Hahaha that pitch is mint
Joseph Lucas: Prince of Darkness
.
Why do the English drink warm beer?
Lucas made fridges.
.
When Lucas finally shut up shop, they sold one of the factories to Dyson.
Now, the factory makes something that well and truly sucks.
Those XJ Jaguars are or were prime candidates for small block Chevy swaps. Mostly because of the Lucas fuel injection