454 knock - looking for suggestions

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

Tremek

Junior Member
Joined
Jul 20, 2017
Posts
20
Reaction score
8
Location
Centennial, CO
First Name
Dave
Truck Year
1977
Truck Model
GMC Sierra C20 Camper Special
Engine Size
454
Hi guys, in my intro thread I had posted about the 1977 GMC C25 Sierra Classic my dad had given me last fall; 77,000 miles and still on its original engine and transmission. The truck had sat more or less for the past 4 years, and as my buddy and I attempted to revive it this past week we unfortunately found it started with an ugly knock - click here for video and sound - so now I'm unsure where to take this thing.

It's a 77 RWD with a TH400 and 4:10 gears, heads are 781s (which I see are desirable in some circles) but it's choked by a weak cam and low compression not to mention whatever's making that knock is Not Good.

I'm torn as to what to do; in terms of diagnosing the knock, it was there both before and after a Rotella 10w30 oil change, so we pulled all the belts off the accessories, still there, used a stethoscope to try and isolate where we could hear it - seems like it's loudest top-front-center of the motor, maybe under the intake manifold with a bias to the passenger side.

So we then took the valve covers off (hence why the covers in the video are bright shiny paint) and adjusted valve lash, no change. Interestingly the knock is louder while in park than it is while in drive - you can hear in the video as it stalls against the converter that the knock itself somehow seems quieter.

We were trying to figure out what it could be - dead lifter, timing chain slap, or rod knock - but I feel like given how loud it is I'm leaning toward the latter. The truck still seemingly runs on all 8 cylinders and will go into gear and drive. Is there any chance it could be a broken flex plate or loose bolt or something? Were that the case, doesn't make sense to me that it's loudest from the front of the motor...

What do you guys think it is, what would you do, etc? If it's rod knock, would you guys try to save this motor, or stab in something else? Ultimately I'd like to drive the truck and use it for truck things but I also like HP, but of course need to balance HP with the reality of a happy wife and not spending $10k on this moneypit right now.
 

84 M1008

Full Access Member
Joined
May 11, 2018
Posts
363
Reaction score
197
Location
New York
First Name
Wayne
Truck Year
1984
Truck Model
M1008 K30
Engine Size
6.2 diesel
Just spitballin, sounds like a wrist pin to me.
 

Obwonkonobe

Full Access Member
Joined
Feb 21, 2017
Posts
531
Reaction score
116
Location
AZ
First Name
Ethan
Truck Year
78
Truck Model
C10 custom deluxe
Engine Size
350
If you have the means, I'd tear it down and give it a BASIC rebuild, maybe toss in a new cam/lifters and defiantly bearings. If it runs good other than the knock I wouldn't touch anything else
 

MrMarty51

Full Access Member
Joined
Oct 25, 2012
Posts
7,794
Reaction score
10,022
Location
Eastern Montana
First Name
Martin
Truck Year
1978
Truck Model
K20
Engine Size
400
Pull one spark plug wire at a time, with the engine running.
If the knock goes away on one or two cylinders, those are the cylinders with the rods knocking.
If the knock gets louder, then, it is a piston or wrist pin problem.
 

Craig 85

Full Access Member
Joined
Jan 25, 2017
Posts
3,917
Reaction score
4,116
Location
Nashville, TN
First Name
Craig
Truck Year
1985
Truck Model
K30 SRW
Engine Size
454/TH-400/NP205
I just had something similar happen to me. I adjusted the valves, pulled a plug wires one at a time and even the mechanical fuel pump. No luck. My truck has supposedly been off the road since 1998. I know it's been non-oped since 2007. The PO said he had replaced the original 454 with another. That engine sat for an extended period too. My knock started last fall right and you could hear it upon starting the engine. I noticed this winter (35-45 degree weather), the knock did not start until the engine oil started warming. This took up to 2 minutes.

I didn't want to tear half the engine apart to determine what the issue was since it's an unknown origin motor and I'm rebuilding the whole truck anyways. I bought a rebuilt 454 from GM (3ys/100K warranty) and I'm waiting for a shop to install it. They haven't pulled the engine yet, but I hope to find what the issue was when that happens.
 

shiftpro

Full Access Member
Joined
Aug 31, 2012
Posts
4,855
Reaction score
6,092
Location
BC Canada
First Name
shiftpro
Truck Year
73-87
Truck Model
1500, 2500, 3500
Engine Size
350, 383, 454, 496!
Tremek you have a great block and heads...
FYI, the 781 heads with a little porting and oversized exhaust valves will support 700hp.
 

4WDKC

Full Access Member
Joined
Jan 27, 2016
Posts
2,366
Reaction score
1,090
Location
Southern Florida
First Name
Kacy
Truck Year
1987
Truck Model
V10
Engine Size
350
I just had something similar happen to me. I adjusted the valves, pulled a plug wires one at a time and even the mechanical fuel pump. No luck. My truck has supposedly been off the road since 1998. I know it's been non-oped since 2007. The PO said he had replaced the original 454 with another. That engine sat for an extended period too. My knock started last fall right and you could hear it upon starting the engine. I noticed this winter (35-45 degree weather), the knock did not start until the engine oil started warming. This took up to 2 minutes.

I didn't want to tear half the engine apart to determine what the issue was since it's an unknown origin motor and I'm rebuilding the whole truck anyways. I bought a rebuilt 454 from GM (3ys/100K warranty) and I'm waiting for a shop to install it. They haven't pulled the engine yet, but I hope to find what the issue was when that happens.


you said it didnt do it when the oil was cold? Make me wonder if the oil was just to thin and could be what the OP is experiencing since he put 10w30 in what probably has had 15w40 all its life..
 

Tremek

Junior Member
Joined
Jul 20, 2017
Posts
20
Reaction score
8
Location
Centennial, CO
First Name
Dave
Truck Year
1977
Truck Model
GMC Sierra C20 Camper Special
Engine Size
454
With my truck, my dad told me he had either Valvoline 5w-30 or 10w-30 run through it since he got the truck in 1983. With that said I don't know if older Valvoline had appropriate ZDDP additives or not; he claims he didn't add additives. With that said, for a while he kept records:

You must be registered for see images attach


To rule out any obvious issues with the flex plate we pulled the inspection cover and nothing stood out. So we started it again and I pulled the #2 spark plug (front passenger side) and the knock definitely changes in tone and gets quieter - so per the advice above, makes me think rod knock.

shiftpro: yeah would love to keep this truck numbers matching, I had read on the 781s that they're worth putting larger valves in for a street truck like this, so along with higher compression pistons and an appropriate cam this thing could make great power.

If I don't want to break the bank - but get this thing back on the road in a way that it should run well and be quick for the next 10 years as a 3rd car/truck - can you guys help me figure out the different paths?

Minimal effort to get back on the road:
  • Pull oil pan, inspect crank & rod bearings - if crank is not scored, might be able to just get away with new rod bearings on one, or all rods?
  • New cam & lifters - since I assume it has a hydraulic flat tappet cam, I could either go with the same style cam or a hydraulic roller cam - thoughts on either direction? Considering it's still hampered by the very low 7.9:1 (assumed) factory CR, are there any cams that can help it even as-is without changing the pistons & rotating assembly?
  • Is the process from there to put in new 10w30 break-in oil w/ additive, run it per the break-in instructions and then drain that, and then another 10w30 + ZDDP additive change and, maybe, good to go at this point?

Versus Building it:
  • Strip the motor & yank it
  • Send the short block off to a machine shop to be inspected, and if good, then bored .060 over for a 496/502 setup?
  • Also have the machine shop clean up the heads, and larger valves installed (is it 2.19s and 1.88s that I see frequently?)
  • Rotating assembly: Do I need or want forged? FYI I'm also in Colorado so will always be approximately 20% down on power versus sea level...
  • Fuel injection & intake manifold: I'm assuming by this point I shouldn't (or can't) keep the stock intake manifold; I'd frankly like to make this truck EFI for ease of starting and also if I drive into the mountains, not having to worry about jetting etc. If I want to go EFI, what intake do you guys recommend, what EFI systems do you guys like, and is MPFI worth pursuing?
  • Cam: As I'd like to build it so I don't have to get back in here or worry about additives, I think I'd like to go hydraulic roller cam/lifters. Other than cost, any reason not to?
  • Timing gear: Has to match cam yes?
  • Headers: I imagine just about any LTs would help this beast breathe?
  • Transmission: I'd really like to get an overdrive on the truck. A 4L80e is appealing for durability and making highway driving more tolerable. Thoughts here?

Overall as much as I'd like to drop $6k+ into the truck this month I probably shouldn't. Is there a happy medium you guys would chase? Thanks!
 

HotRodPC

Administrator
Staff member
Admin
Joined
Aug 29, 2010
Posts
47,128
Reaction score
9,299
Location
OKC, OK
First Name
HotRod
Truck Year
85 K20 LWB
Truck Model
Silverado
Engine Size
454 - Turbo 400 - 3.73
Unless it's the sound to the camera, and audio to my computer, that doesn't sound like a rod knock at all to me. I'll have to listen to it a couple more times to be sure, but it just don't sound rod knockish IMO.
 

HotRodPC

Administrator
Staff member
Admin
Joined
Aug 29, 2010
Posts
47,128
Reaction score
9,299
Location
OKC, OK
First Name
HotRod
Truck Year
85 K20 LWB
Truck Model
Silverado
Engine Size
454 - Turbo 400 - 3.73
On 2nd thought though, I guess I will go with rod knock or at least crank driven knock rather than valve train knock. Crank driven as in rod knock, wrist pin or cracked flexplate. Reason I'll change my mind isn't because of the tone of the sound that's likely thrown off by cam recording to my computer playing it back, but the speed of the knock/tick. It appears to be a fast knock/tick. Cam and Valvetrain spin half that of the crank so it was a valvetrain knock/tick it would be a slower knock/tick.
 

idahovette

Full Access Member
Joined
Aug 7, 2016
Posts
7,271
Reaction score
15,878
Location
Weiser Idaho
First Name
Perry
Truck Year
1975-1979
Truck Model
K20-K10
Engine Size
350
I haven't ever done this, but can you pull the torque convertor bolts, slide the convertor back, and fire the engine to see if that makes any difference? Don't know if there is enough room for this to be done.
 

4WDKC

Full Access Member
Joined
Jan 27, 2016
Posts
2,366
Reaction score
1,090
Location
Southern Florida
First Name
Kacy
Truck Year
1987
Truck Model
V10
Engine Size
350
With my truck, my dad told me he had either Valvoline 5w-30 or 10w-30 run through it since he got the truck in 1983. With that said I don't know if older Valvoline had appropriate ZDDP additives or not; he claims he didn't add additives. With that said, for a while he kept records:

You must be registered for see images attach


To rule out any obvious issues with the flex plate we pulled the inspection cover and nothing stood out. So we started it again and I pulled the #2 spark plug (front passenger side) and the knock definitely changes in tone and gets quieter - so per the advice above, makes me think rod knock.

shiftpro: yeah would love to keep this truck numbers matching, I had read on the 781s that they're worth putting larger valves in for a street truck like this, so along with higher compression pistons and an appropriate cam this thing could make great power.

If I don't want to break the bank - but get this thing back on the road in a way that it should run well and be quick for the next 10 years as a 3rd car/truck - can you guys help me figure out the different paths?

Minimal effort to get back on the road:
  • Pull oil pan, inspect crank & rod bearings - if crank is not scored, might be able to just get away with new rod bearings on one, or all rods?
  • New cam & lifters - since I assume it has a hydraulic flat tappet cam, I could either go with the same style cam or a hydraulic roller cam - thoughts on either direction? Considering it's still hampered by the very low 7.9:1 (assumed) factory CR, are there any cams that can help it even as-is without changing the pistons & rotating assembly?
  • Is the process from there to put in new 10w30 break-in oil w/ additive, run it per the break-in instructions and then drain that, and then another 10w30 + ZDDP additive change and, maybe, good to go at this point?

Versus Building it:
  • Strip the motor & yank it
  • Send the short block off to a machine shop to be inspected, and if good, then bored .060 over for a 496/502 setup?
  • Also have the machine shop clean up the heads, and larger valves installed (is it 2.19s and 1.88s that I see frequently?)
  • Rotating assembly: Do I need or want forged? FYI I'm also in Colorado so will always be approximately 20% down on power versus sea level...
  • Fuel injection & intake manifold: I'm assuming by this point I shouldn't (or can't) keep the stock intake manifold; I'd frankly like to make this truck EFI for ease of starting and also if I drive into the mountains, not having to worry about jetting etc. If I want to go EFI, what intake do you guys recommend, what EFI systems do you guys like, and is MPFI worth pursuing?
  • Cam: As I'd like to build it so I don't have to get back in here or worry about additives, I think I'd like to go hydraulic roller cam/lifters. Other than cost, any reason not to?
  • Timing gear: Has to match cam yes?
  • Headers: I imagine just about any LTs would help this beast breathe?
  • Transmission: I'd really like to get an overdrive on the truck. A 4L80e is appealing for durability and making highway driving more tolerable. Thoughts here?

Overall as much as I'd like to drop $6k+ into the truck this month I probably shouldn't. Is there a happy medium you guys would chase? Thanks!

Back in the zinc was in oil by default it has been greatly reduced since flat tappet cams are no longer in production cars. Rotella supposedly has enough zinc in it, i use Valvoline VR1 racing oil is available in 10w30. If your going to build it and add efi just find a running vortec 454 96-01 and put your heads on it.
 

crpntr78

Full Access Member
Joined
Jan 8, 2016
Posts
537
Reaction score
434
Location
Missouri
First Name
Jerry
Truck Year
86
Truck Model
K10
Engine Size
350
Yes, that can be done.
 

crpntr78

Full Access Member
Joined
Jan 8, 2016
Posts
537
Reaction score
434
Location
Missouri
First Name
Jerry
Truck Year
86
Truck Model
K10
Engine Size
350
I haven't ever done this, but can you pull the torque convertor bolts, slide the convertor back, and fire the engine to see if that makes any difference? Don't know if there is enough room for this to be done.

Yes that can be done.
 

Tremek

Junior Member
Joined
Jul 20, 2017
Posts
20
Reaction score
8
Location
Centennial, CO
First Name
Dave
Truck Year
1977
Truck Model
GMC Sierra C20 Camper Special
Engine Size
454
Back in the zinc was in oil by default it has been greatly reduced since flat tappet cams are no longer in production cars. Rotella supposedly has enough zinc in it, i use Valvoline VR1 racing oil is available in 10w30. If your going to build it and add efi just find a running vortec 454 96-01 and put your heads on it.

So if I understand correctly mk IV heads can go on a Gen VI block, but not the other way around? What would the advantage be of taking my heads to the Gen VI truck? Also, why 96-01? Looks like the 4L80e started being behind the 454 in '91 if my searching is right?
 

Forum statistics

Threads
44,173
Posts
950,869
Members
36,289
Latest member
HT2abbottrl
Top