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Old 06-20-2021, 11:27 PM #1
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Cam shaft seal driving difficulties

EDIT: Success!! The resolution is in post 16


I'm in the process of doing my timing belt and have been following @mtbtim 's video. It had been going relatively smoothly until I got to the cam seals. I've done a timing belt and replaced cam and crank seals on my Miata, so it's not my first time, and normally I don't have issues with this sort of thing because I work at a snail pace and am pretty meticulous. I'm at a loss for what's going on here.

I got all of the recommended tools for the job, and used the Lisle 58430 seal puller. Despite taking care to not gouge it into the cam shaft, it left a mark when pulling the seal. I can't really feel it with my finger, and just get a hint of something running a nail over it. I'm not sure how much is too much, as far as wearing the seal prematurely.



Ran some scotchbrite pad over the new mark, and it didn't do much other than clean up the shaft. I thoroughly wiped out the pocket for the seal, cleaned it with a qtip with brake cleaner on it, made sure there was no lint in it, etc. I lubed the new seal with clean motor oil and selected the correct size cups from the PBT seal driver/puller kit and ran it in with an electric ratchet. Aaaand this was the result.



Ok, now I'm kinda pissed. I take care to insert the Lisle seal puller into the face of the seal itself above the shaft, specifically so I don't make contact with the shaft and leave a new mark. And it leaves a new mark.

I don't know what to make of the perimeter of the botched seal. I'm not sure how it has so much "gray" on it, especially after swabbing with brake cleaner. I assume it's aluminum from the cam cap, since that's the side that got all pooched out.





Using an inspection mirror, I found that the cam cap has some corrosion inside that I missed the first time. Ah, this must be the source of the problem. I slowly polish it out with a nylon trim pry tool wrapped in scotchbrite. I clean everything out again with a microfiber towel.

This time I lube the seal and the inside of the seal pocket and shaft with 75w-90, just for some added help. I have noticed by this point that the cam cap side has no chamfer, unlike the side of the pocket cut into the head. I cheat the cap side a little, trying to help it slip in first, and get the seal driver stack on, and run it in. And it did it again.



Top view of pooched area


Weird angle, but this is the bottom, with the chamfer, and it went in without issue.


Since the stackup of drivers won't bottom the seal I drove it the rest of the way with a deadblow, and it ended up slightly better than the first seal with the muffin top, but certainly not what I would call "correct". I know it's not right, but would this leak? I'm more just curious, I don't think I could sleep leaving it like this.

Any idea wtf is going on? In the videos I've seen they just jam the Lisle puller in and yank it out, and don't seem to (or don't mention) mar the shaft. And they just drive the seal in without issue. I'm not looking forward to asking my parts guy if they offer a volume discount on cam seals.

Last edited by PrinceValorum; 06-25-2021 at 12:21 PM.
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Old 06-21-2021, 09:45 AM #2
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Just realized I forgot to put the seals in the freezer. I'm sure that didn't help things, but any other suggestions on top of that? I really don't want to have to pull the valve covers again. I just did the gaskets last summer.
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Old 06-21-2021, 02:04 PM #3
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The grey you see on the seal is the metal inside the seal (rubber ripped off of it).

No, a freezer won't help. Just *just* ran into this issue on my 3s-gte. Head had a chamfer, cam cap didn't. I ruined 3 seals before I got 2 in successufully.

I actually pulled out my deburring tool and added a chamfer to get it to go in.

Something like this, the cutter spins around to always keep the right angle as you pull it around the hole:



Good luck! (at least you have better access with a RWD platform - try doing this with a strut tower in the way!)

-Charlie
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Old 06-21-2021, 02:49 PM #4
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Nice, great idea. I just ordered some more seals and a deburring tool, so I'll give that a shot.
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Old 06-21-2021, 06:25 PM #5
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Quote:
Originally Posted by PrinceValorum View Post
Nice, great idea. I just ordered some more seals and a deburring tool, so I'll give that a shot.
Here's hoping you don't end up with a pile like this with a twin cam motor...





-Charlie
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Old 06-21-2021, 07:13 PM #6
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I know this isn't any consolation, since you already started changing the seals. But I've never seen a camshaft seal leak. Ever. Crankshaft yes, camshaft no.

I think at this point you need to take off the valve covers and the #1 camshaft bracket on the intake camshaft on both heads. I THINK you can get away with just the one on the end since it's the first one removed in the sequence but please consult the FSM and make sure you don't risk warping the camshaft. Then the seal slides right in perfectly each time and the bracket will tighten down as much as needed. It sounds very similar to my rear axle seal fiasco, too many wasted seals.
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Old 06-22-2021, 01:28 PM #7
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That is a good point for others reading this - don't replace those seals unless they are leaking. Mine are still good at 300k miles.

My 3s-gte needed them at ~200k miles and ~25 years though, so they aren't totally perfect... (they had just started weeping)

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Old 06-23-2021, 11:26 AM #8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gamefreakgc View Post
I know this isn't any consolation, since you already started changing the seals. But I've never seen a camshaft seal leak. Ever. Crankshaft yes, camshaft no.

I think at this point you need to take off the valve covers and the #1 camshaft bracket on the intake camshaft on both heads. I THINK you can get away with just the one on the end since it's the first one removed in the sequence but please consult the FSM and make sure you don't risk warping the camshaft. Then the seal slides right in perfectly each time and the bracket will tighten down as much as needed. It sounds very similar to my rear axle seal fiasco, too many wasted seals.
Hindsight is 20/20, but this is good to know for the future, and others. I figured at 226k it was worth the risk to change them, prior to knowing this.


I got the deburring tool, I couldn't believe they are only $8 on McMaster Carr. I was also amazed how it just carved through the aluminum.

Got the upper half chamfered and smoothed out afterwards with red scotchbrite.

Sorry for the terrible pic, it's really tough to get a picture of the relevant stuff with the camshaft protruding. For anyone following along, I only chamfered the upper half, outlined in orange, and blended it in to the bottom half in the head.



I'll try again when the new seals come in.
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Old 06-23-2021, 11:27 AM #9
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Quote:
Originally Posted by phattyduck View Post
That is a good point for others reading this - don't replace those seals unless they are leaking. Mine are still good at 300k miles.

My 3s-gte needed them at ~200k miles and ~25 years though, so they aren't totally perfect... (they had just started weeping)

-Charlie
Is the 3s-gte the one that's hard on oil? Do it and the 5VZ share the same cam seals?
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Old 06-23-2021, 11:52 AM #10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by phattyduck View Post
The grey you see on the seal is the metal inside the seal (rubber ripped off of it).

No, a freezer won't help. Just *just* ran into this issue on my 3s-gte. Head had a chamfer, cam cap didn't. I ruined 3 seals before I got 2 in successufully.

I actually pulled out my deburring tool and added a chamfer to get it to go in.

Something like this, the cutter spins around to always keep the right angle as you pull it around the hole:



Good luck! (at least you have better access with a RWD platform - try doing this with a strut tower in the way!)

-Charlie

thanks, never thought of using one of those for that ...the last time I had an issue with seals was on my last axle bearing job, and I could not get the toyota seals to drive nice.....should of thought of that , but lots of seals have a chamfer
will have to order one of those tools, glad they arent spendy
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Old 06-23-2021, 01:00 PM #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by PrinceValorum View Post
Is the 3s-gte the one that's hard on oil? Do it and the 5VZ share the same cam seals?
Haven't heard of it being particularly hard on oil, but it does make close to 300hp out of 2L and 4 cylinders in factory form (later JDM revisions). More horsepower and torque than the 5VZ with much less displacement and fewer cylinders. I actually run the same Rotella T6 and Toyota OEM oil filter on the 5VZ and 3s-gte these days...

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Old 06-23-2021, 01:08 PM #12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by phattyduck View Post
Haven't heard of it being particularly hard on oil, but it does make close to 300hp out of 2L and 4 cylinders in factory form (later JDM revisions). More horsepower and torque than the 5VZ with much less displacement and fewer cylinders. I actually run the same Rotella T6 and Toyota OEM oil filter on the 5VZ and 3s-gte these days...

-Charlie
Oh, whoops, I was thinking of the 1MZ-FE in the Camry. I ran the Rotella T6 in a Mazdaspeed6 I had before I got the 4Runner. It was fun, but it was difficult to enjoy while being worried about it breaking the whole time, lol
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Old 06-23-2021, 01:14 PM #13
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Oh, whoops, I was thinking of the 1MZ-FE in the Camry. I ran the Rotella T6 in a Mazdaspeed6 I had before I got the 4Runner. It was fun, but it was difficult to enjoy while being worried about it breaking the whole time, lol
Haha, yeah. My Camry is motor swapped, thus the confusion.

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Old 06-25-2021, 08:38 AM #14
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It is way out of focus, but is there a chance that this metal burr is what is blocking the seal from going in correctly?
Cam shaft seal driving difficulties-potential-problem-jpg

You could try using the cam gear + bolt to drive the seal in perfectly straight as well. I would either remove the cam cap or freeze the seal to try putting it in the second time.

Good luck!
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Old 06-25-2021, 10:50 AM #15
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Were you using OEM seals or seals from a reputable timing belt kit like the aircabinman kit we recommend using in our video? I've now done this job twice, once on Sean's rig when we shot the video and once very recently on my 2000 rig. Both times I had no issues installing the new cam seals. They went in with very little effort. It seems like the sizing of the seal is a bit off for the outer rubber coating to be smooshed off from the insertion. That is not normal.

I've had the lisle seal puller tool make a detectable mark visually, but when I rub my finger over it, I couldn't detect any actual marring of the surface that would compromise the seal. It's like the seal puller arm just left a smudge on the surface of the cam but didn't create a gouge or scratch if that makes sense.

I know some people use the technique of drilling a screw into the seal to remove it but I would worry about leaving the slightest metal burr in there that would damage the seal from using that technique. The Lisle tool does a pretty good job for the seal removal. That specialty cam and crankshaft seal remover and installer kit we show in the video is good for the seal insertion but not so great for the seal removal. I don't like the fact that the seal removal arms in that kit are made thicker so it's hard to get them inserted between the shaft and the sealing lip of the seal. The Lisle arm is thin and fits between the shaft and seal very easily. I used that specialty kit to remove one seal and that was when I was doing a clutch job and we replaced the rear main seal. The Lisle tool wasn't strong enough to get the seal out. Once there were two opposing spots on the seal that were bent out a bit from the Lisle attempts, getting the specialty kit arms was possible and we were able to get the seal out.
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