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Sexton engine rebuild tag
Can someone tell me what the letters at the top stand for? Other pictures are of engine parts. Jesse.
Last edited by Jesse Browning; 24-12-09 at 02:41. Reason: pictures |
#2
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Rceme
RCEME stands for "Royal Canadian Electrical and Mechanical Engineers" . This style of rebuild plate was rivited to rebuilt vehicle engines throughout the 1950's and into the 1970's. Similar, but generally smaller tags, were used on rebuilt transmissions and transfer cases etc to indicate the date and workshop where the item was rebuilt. Someone probably can break the workshop code: 202 Workshop may have been at Montreal.
I have some NOS blank engine rebuild plates. PM me for details if interested. Brian |
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Brian; Thanks for the information. I had wondered which country my Sexton belonged to, and this seems to answer the question. Jesse.
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Quote:
This still stands: Quote:
Hanno
__________________
Regards, Hanno -------------------------- |
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202 Workshop
Quote:
http://www.forces.gc.ca/admmat-smama...epasse-eng.asp
__________________
Terry Warner - 74-????? M151A2 - 70-08876 M38A1 - 53-71233 M100CDN trailer Beware! The Green Disease walks among us! |
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It's just to bad 202 does not do very good rebuilds these days. I would say a 3 out of 5 detroit 6V53's coming out of there are buggered.
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Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Hanno
__________________
Regards, Hanno -------------------------- |
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Quote:
Hanno
__________________
Regards, Hanno -------------------------- |
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The shop number is 205. Interestingly, this engine seems to have some problems due to the rebuild process. The engine has almost no perceptible wear. It has an oil contamination problem though. Small scores, and embedded particles in most bushings. As of today, I have all accessories apart. The problem seems to be a large wad of sand or other abrasive that was left in the fuel pump extension. Also. the oil filter motor was never conected to an oil supply, and the manual knob was still lock-wired. In it's short service life, the engine also ate a small piece of metal. Probably a screw. The suction side of the impeller is all banged up. After that, you can follow the progress of the screw through the whole engine by the marks it made. It ended up in no. 8 cylinder, and chipped a couple of edges off the piston before it was finally spit out. I read an article once stating that most aircraft engine failures in military aircraft (WWII era) were caused by foreign materials, mostly rouge, left in the engine during manufacture. Jesse.
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Radial
Hi Jesse,
Interesting thread, pics, and info you've detailed about the foreign objects. I have bits of a number of R975-EC2's to rebuild into one or possibly two motors for my General Grant project. Looks like you've blasted your intake and pushrod tubes - did you have to do much to clean them up inside or were they all connected up still? Great to see your Sexton making good progress. Regards Alex |
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Quote:
Don't take that website literally. I sent them a correction notice for a blunder on their internal DND website. They had a very wrong caption on a Sexton. I think some scrawny web-geek was told to pretty up the website, and here is the unit history booklet. The letter designation might just be a typo that is repeated. Terry
__________________
Terry Warner - 74-????? M151A2 - 70-08876 M38A1 - 53-71233 M100CDN trailer Beware! The Green Disease walks among us! |
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Base Workshops
Following is a list of "Base Workshop Numbers and Locations" as provided by Rob Grieve in his article "Canadian M38 Jeeps", published in CMP Magazine, issue #13, May 1996.
200 Halifax, N.S. 201 Coldbrook, N.S. 202 Montreal, P.Q. 203 Quebec, P.Q. 204 London, Ont. 205 Bordon, Ont. 206 Lakeview (Cawthra Rd.) Ont. 207 Barriesfield (Kingston) Ont. 208 Ottawa, Ont. 209 Petawawa, Ont. 210 Picton, Ont. 211 Regina, Sask. 212 Shilo, Man. 213 Winnipeg, Man. 214 Vancouver, B.C. 215 Calgary, Alb. 216 Chilliwack, B.C. 217 Esquimalt, B.C. 218 Vernon, B.C. 219 Whitehorse, Y.T. 220 Fort Nelson, B.C. 221 Rivers, Man. 222 MacDonald, Man. 223 Fort Churchill, Man. 224 Edmonton, Alb. 225 Trenton, Ont. 226 Lachine, P.Q. 227 Goosebay, Lab. 228 Hagersville, Ont. 229 ? 230 ? 231 ? 232 ? 233 ? 234 Valcartier, P.Q. ------------------------ Brian |
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Do you think my Sexton was near Borden Ont., or was that just where the rebuilt engine came from? Jesse.
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The push rod tubes were clean inside. The induction tubes all had some rust inside, two being rusted out. The engine was complete and unmolested; suffering mainly from neglect (internal condensation) and the above mentioned problems. Interestingly, I had two Sextons to chose from when I bought this. For the most part identical. The other one ran. Amazingly, they put a 12 foot bar on the drive shaft and broke the engine loose. With the carb off, and spraying starting fluid into the elbow, they got it to fire. After the carb was re-installed, they drove it all over the farm with no air cleaner before selling it. He wanted more money for it since it was "restored". It is in a museum in southern Indiana now. This a picture of it in it's restored condition. This is how they ran the engine. Jesse.
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Hello Jesse.
Does the Serial Number of the engine match any vehicle records for your Sexton? If it's the original factory installed engine, there is a good chance the actual vehicle may have been at Borden when the engine was overhauled. If the numbers do not match, the odds increase that whenever the original engine in the Sexton needed servicing, it was simply shipped off to the nearest RCEME unit capable of doing the work and a "new" rebuilt engine was ordered out of stores through the system for installation. |
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David; I don't have any vehicle records. There are many stamped numbers on various parts of the engine, but none match the vehicle serial number. Jesse.
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Hello again Jesse.
I'm not that familiar with the Sexton, other than riding in Bill Gregg's many years back and enjoying the scent of avgas in the air, but if the original data plate(s) survived on your vehicle, it might have identified the original engine number for you. There is also the possibility that if the vehicle itself went in for a major model upgrade, a new data plate would have been added, showing that info as well. One can see this quite often on half tracks that left the factory as an M16 for example but were subsequently converted to an M3 vehicle. I checked an old copy of Peter Ford's CMP INFOEX but none of the five Sextons he had been able to locate had Engine Data available and only one owner could provide a vehicle SN. Was hoping there might have been enough information available to help you plug yours into the production scheme of things. |
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workshop
Is the indication on this plate on the rear side of a Ford V-8
engine also a workshop number ? On the front side is an other plate with REF: ENG May be brittisch and not canadian ? |
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I checked the rebuild tag on my Sexton engine, it's 205 Workshop as well. Dated 3-3-52. One odd note is the engine number on the tag, 456, does not match the engine's number, 507415. I wonder if the engine number on the tag was just a sequentail number assigned to the engines as they passed through the workshop. My engine shows very little wear as well, just the damage from condensation in a few cylinders. The motor had a stuck exhaust vavle on #7 cylinder that resulted in a broken push rod, and a heavily corroded supercharger impeller.
Perry |
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My engine was rebuilt 6-2-52 and had a number of 414. The original number is 507412. It looks like ours were on the assembly line pretty close together. My vehicle shop number is 1900. 1941 is in the Crown Point museum nearby, and 1539 is in a museum in southern Indiana. Jesse.
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