Back when I was a kid (too many years ago to admit) I once watched an outfit that came to town to the local auto wreckers to squash cars and ship them out. They had a John Deere wheel loader with forks on it to move cars around. He used a fork to lever open the hood, then pushed the fork down under the front of the motor and popped it out like shucking an oyster. Took about a minute. I don't remember any further dismantling operations so I think they did it just to get the car squashed tighter for getting the max load on the truck.
Not sure if that would work as well with today's transverse mounted motors.
Focker, I suspect if you chased down more info on the millionaire who specialized in dismantling engines you would find he probably had a lot of special tooling made up to speed the process. If he just did engines, did he process cars or did egines come to him already out of the car?
I wonder how much stuff he resold as engine
cores?
I would think the small guy would have to be maximizing the sales of everything out of the engine--anything that can go for more than scrap, ie, cores, would have to be diverted accordingly.
The engines would have to be set up so they can be accessed quickly, maybe on an engine stand like is used for engine rebuilding. Zap out the top end bolts, flip the engine and zap off the pan and crank bolts. Water pump and stuff on the front is easily accessed as well. Pistons could be hammered out unless they are seized in the bores so some sort of press would be needed. The same sort of process would be necessary for the transmission.
I can see lots of time and recovery studies would be necessary!! And lots of motors, too because I'm guessing that batch processing of say, 10
identical motors at a time would be necessary to speed up things.
If there isn't much money in recovering engine parts for cores for more than scrap value then it is probably better to munch up the motor in a shredding machine (or whatever they call those things that chop up motors and trannys) and separate the metals once it is shredded up.
An interesting problem and maybe money there but very monotonous work!!
Jon.
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