AMC 304 Oil Pressure Issue
Span24
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“The road to the Emerald City is paved with yellow brick!”
Fellow CJ Lovers,
I recently purchased a restored 79 CJ5 /AMC 304 which was reported by the seller to have only 22K original (engine) miles. He delivered the Jeep to me so the engine was already warmed when, at the time of delivery I drove it about 20 miles with no problems other than (what was described as) a non-functional stock electric oil pressure gauge. The engine ran and sounded fine other than not idling in 1st gear 4-low. The seller indicated that the oil pressure gauge was not working because the ground was not connected and that the idle problem was due to the idle being set too low.
The day after closing the deal on the Jeep I started it up cold and noticed a very prominent tapping like that of a poorly adjusted rocker. After a few moments and some throttle exercises the tapping simply vanished. It did not fade but abruptly stopped. I thought that perhaps it was a sticky valve?
After checking out the oil pressure gauge and (indeed) finding that the ground was not secure I managed to get it properly grounded. However, the gauge still reads zero but bounces to 5-10 PSI only rarely. I tested the gauge by grounding the sensor wire to the frame which pegged it. Because of this I believe the gauge to be functioning.
I started the Jeep again this morning and the tapping was there. Again, following a few throttle exercises it went away, all the while the gauge read zero. If I allow the engine to idle for a period it will start tapping again until I pump the throttle. I'm not sure if it continues when the engine completely warms up.
Where should my testing go from here? I am thinking that I need to know what the pressure is using a mechanical gauge. I'm thinking that if the pressure is good then either something is sticking on the top end, or a lifter is bad, or the bearings are worn. I remember a very long time ago a friend cut the top off of an old set of GM valve covers to adjust the rockers on Chevy small blocks. If I had a set of those I'm thinking I could see what the oil looks like on top. These days however, getting my hands on a set of spare valve covers for this old AMC 304 doesn't sound practical.
Although I'm hoping for a bad sending unit and a sticky valve or rocker I am very much concerned that the tapping may be from lack of oil pressure and that the oil pump is failing or worse, that a lifter is bad or the main or cam bearings are worn.
Any thoughts/advice is appreciated!
Michael
I recently purchased a restored 79 CJ5 /AMC 304 which was reported by the seller to have only 22K original (engine) miles. He delivered the Jeep to me so the engine was already warmed when, at the time of delivery I drove it about 20 miles with no problems other than (what was described as) a non-functional stock electric oil pressure gauge. The engine ran and sounded fine other than not idling in 1st gear 4-low. The seller indicated that the oil pressure gauge was not working because the ground was not connected and that the idle problem was due to the idle being set too low.
The day after closing the deal on the Jeep I started it up cold and noticed a very prominent tapping like that of a poorly adjusted rocker. After a few moments and some throttle exercises the tapping simply vanished. It did not fade but abruptly stopped. I thought that perhaps it was a sticky valve?
After checking out the oil pressure gauge and (indeed) finding that the ground was not secure I managed to get it properly grounded. However, the gauge still reads zero but bounces to 5-10 PSI only rarely. I tested the gauge by grounding the sensor wire to the frame which pegged it. Because of this I believe the gauge to be functioning.
I started the Jeep again this morning and the tapping was there. Again, following a few throttle exercises it went away, all the while the gauge read zero. If I allow the engine to idle for a period it will start tapping again until I pump the throttle. I'm not sure if it continues when the engine completely warms up.
Where should my testing go from here? I am thinking that I need to know what the pressure is using a mechanical gauge. I'm thinking that if the pressure is good then either something is sticking on the top end, or a lifter is bad, or the bearings are worn. I remember a very long time ago a friend cut the top off of an old set of GM valve covers to adjust the rockers on Chevy small blocks. If I had a set of those I'm thinking I could see what the oil looks like on top. These days however, getting my hands on a set of spare valve covers for this old AMC 304 doesn't sound practical.
Although I'm hoping for a bad sending unit and a sticky valve or rocker I am very much concerned that the tapping may be from lack of oil pressure and that the oil pump is failing or worse, that a lifter is bad or the main or cam bearings are worn.

Any thoughts/advice is appreciated!
Michael