Did you take the rocker arm off and the rods fell out? That's okay. They're not hooked to anything; the top of the cam follower has an indention in it to hold the end of the pushrod, and there's an indention on the rocker to hold the rod end...so when you put the rocker arm back on, the pushrod will guide itself into place.
You can put grease on the rod and gently push it into the block. the grease will hold it in place for a good amount of time.
Sure can, Quick A bent push rod will cause a loose rocker A loose rocker has no way to bend a push rod, there is no pressure.
intake short push rod, exhaust long push rod. put short push rod on rocker closes to intake manifold.
exhaust puh rod is longer. they measure 6 inches while intake push rods measure 5.68 in
Push rod.
3.1 ENGINE PUSH ROD LOCATIONS exhaust valve -long push rods 6.0 long 152.5MM intake valve-short push rod 5.75 long 144 MM rear head facing firewall <-----front engine E.LONG PUSH ROD I.SHORT PUSH ROD REAR HEAD VALVE ORDER E.I.E.I.I.E. FRONT HEAD VALVE ORDER E.I.I.E.I.E.
Two per cylinder, 4 per side, 8 push rod tubes.
Remove the valve cover. Remove the center nut or bolt that holds down the rocker arm. remove rocker arm, pull out the bent push rod. Install new push rod and put it back together.
It depends on what kind of rod is being fixed. A push rod and a tie rod both need to be removed and replaced if the current one is damaged.
A bad push rod will not against the engine block. This will create a very loud noise that will come from the bottom of the vehicle. The vehicle should not be used when experiencing this.
Replace push-rod
Pull the fuel pump off and remove the lower two bolts that hold the cover plate to the block. Slide out the push rod and figure out why it's stuck. If it's just a little sludge, you should be able to clean things up enough to get the push rod to move freely. Also, roll the push rod over a flat surface to make sure it's not bent.