I want it done right and am afraid to give it to another mechanic.
Just recently I replaced the fuel pump in it and there was grunt work work done on this by the mechanic who put in the last fuel pump. Gouging the mating surface where the lock ring turns on. Had to cut and shave it down in order to slide the ring back on. Couldn't understand why anyone would have to gouge the surface to remove that ring. Anyways I don't have trust in these mechanics in my neighborhood so I have to do this myself. I know I am not going to force something or gouge something then hide it or ignore it. I think if I knew a really good mechanic I might have them do it. But I am the best mechanic I know at the moment. LOL
Hey you sound like you have my luck
Anyone touches it for any reason, and they ***** even the most basic of tasks
Only time I let someone else touch my rig was to do the fuel pump and they left it parked in a snowstorm with the windows down. Yay.
Just.... Be careful of the "while I'm in there" trap. It has merit, but you'll need to cut yourself off at some point.
Finish your diag, sort what you need. Hell.... It's also entirely possible there's nothing wrong with your engine and you have 2 separate issues at the same time being funny. Say.... For example... A leaky rear heater line that only does so when hot and under pressure, and a bad engine oil dipstick o-ring, causing rainwater to get in your oil and coolant loss. Can't say that's your issue. I'm just tossing out an example to say: step back and look at the whole problem, don't just search for what you want to find. The second you go 'tunnel vision,' you've lost the diag.
That said: If, *IF* you need heads and will be doing that work, what I would do:
- Compression and leakdown tests before you take the heads off. Get a base level motor health measurement. Check these wet and dry.
- Pop the oil pan off, remove the main bearing caps, and inspect. See how they look visually, then plasti-gauge them to check for tolerance. If they're good, don't mess with them. Leave the rest of the engine alone.
- Strictly speaking, you could hone and re-ring your cylinders if you determine that's needed. Just pop your pistons out, hone/descale bores, re-ring, set gaps, and you're good. But again... Only if needed.
- While you have the pan off, do the pickup tube o-ring.
Big difference in amount of work and parts if you're just replacing the heads vs. pulling the motor and doing a full rebuild. If all she needs is heads, don't go dumping an extra 2 dozen hours of labor and couple thousand into it.