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Giulietta
Selected model: Giulietta (Deselect)
How To.. Strip and rebuild an Alfa Romeo Giulia Engine

How To.. Strip and rebuild an Alfa Romeo Giulia Engine

These guides serve as an introduction into various Alfa maintenance tasks, and are designed to give Alfa owners a better understanding of the work that is involved. These are not full Alfa Romeo workshop manuals, where you will find the official techniques, technical specs and important safety considerations, which we would recommend you study before attempting any of these tasks.

The next job is to remove the rocker cover, this is secured by the 6 fasteners along the top of the engine and two M6 bolts on the front. The camshaft chain tensioner needs to be slackened using the 14mm nut on the front of the head when the chain is loose this needs to be tightened. The camshaft drive chain then needs to be removed, there is a split link in the chain which you have to find and undo, noting that the closed end faces the direction of travel. The cylinder head can now be removed, this is secured by the 10, 19mm capped nuts between the camshafts and 2 M8 nuts either side of the camshaft chain chest, these go up into the cylinder head.

The head can now be pulled off, if it has seized on its studs you will have to use a special puller to do the job. It is advisable to remove the distributor at this point noting the relationship between the rotor arm and the crank position as it has to go back in correct position to enable the engine to run

Once the head is off the engine needs to be turned over and the sump needs to be removed, on a Giulia this has to be done in two halves while on an Alfetta it is one part, the fuel pump and drive rod needs to come out before the oil pump can come off the oil pump is secured by the three fasteners along the lower face of the engine and once these are undone it will slide out.

The front pulley has to be removed before the timing chain case can then be removed to expose the lower timing chain, the upper and lower gears for this then have to be pulled off the front of the crankshaft.

You can now remove the big end nuts while making sure that the pistons and liners do not fall out and checking that the con rods are numbered in the correct order, once this has been done successfully you can remove the main bearing caps and extract the crank shaft. If the pistons and liners are still in place which is usually the case the piston should now be removed from its liner and the liner should be extracted from the block. Rebuilding the engine is achieved by reversing these instructions

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