If you have a seized engine, the first step is to diagnose the cause, which may include lack of oil, overheating, or internal damage. Depending on the severity, you can attempt to free the engine by applying penetrating oil to the spark plug holes and gently turning the crankshaft with a wrench. If this doesn't work, consider consulting a mechanic or evaluating whether to repair or replace the engine based on the cost-effectiveness of each option. In some cases, it may be more practical to replace the vehicle altogether.
The engine has seized up! Pirates have seized the port!
a seized engine will not turn over. Even using a socket and ratchet on the crank bolt, the engine is not going to move. It is frozen, or seized up.
No. If it did crank over it wouldn't be seized.
When an engine is seized up, it will not turn over. The crank cannot make a rotation. Take hold of the main pulley and try to turn it. When you cannot turn the engine over, it is seized.
Piston seized to cylinder wall Broken Crankshaft
The tuck will run forever.
It will not turn over.
Nothing, it sits there unable to do anything
No it will not run at all
If it has seized up it will need overhauled or replaced.
If the engine has seized, then it's pretty much done for. Transmission fluid, or engine oil, will do nothing to solve that. Transmission fluid goes in the transmission - which if that is seized, again - you're in trouble. The only way to get around replacement is to disassemble the seized component (engine, tranny, whatever) and replace the seized components and anything else that was damaged as a result of the seizing. sorry.
If the cranks shaft pulley is seized, the whole engine is seized.