ok so I need resolve this issue physically rather than guessing online cos I dunno the exact matching thread size and would be wasting time waiting for orders.
so I drove to afew local hydraulics places to locate a matching adapter.
the first shop didn't have any suitable matches or would have to order some fittings over few days. nope no chance, need it now.
went to second shop, the guy was just about to start lunch break but gave it a look.
ideally I'd like to find adapters where I can still utilise the AN4 & AN10 fittings I've just received but matching the turbo ports odd threads seemed troublesome.
my worst case option I dread would be to utilise the adapter that came with the turbo and I'd have to send all the hoses back and upgrade to bigger AN5 oil feed fittings, meaning more wasted time & money.
the solution was to get an AN4 adapter and custom machine the other end down to 1/2" UNF 20tpi to fit the turbo, so now I can simply use the AN4 hose fittings
for the drain side, my old adapter goes from metric 22mm to 5/8 UNF and they added afew adapters to convert to a AN10.
costed just £10 for the two adapters and I can now use the AN4/AN10 fittings but the messy drain fitting conversion is too long
so lets join these two adapters together. verified it's steel so can weld em.
cut the obsolete threads off
grinded/sanded the faces flat.
the AN10 fitting is 12.2mm bore while the metric 22 fitting for the turbo is a larger 12.75mm bore.
so to chamfer the sudden step difference and to help keep things concentric, I drilled a slight 12.5mm hole into the AN10 fitting and use the drill bit to keep them lined up during welding
tacked & welded
grinded flat for the socket tool
here's the chamfered hole size difference
it all fits together nicely now and the amount of overhang matches the old hose fittings
the complete series of fittings
now the new series of port sizes appear much better
now to replace the sump drain fitting, I covered the insides to keep out dirt
time to chip all this epoxy off
that epoxy certainly did it's job of bonding / sealing hard onto the metal.
there's a dilema of either:
- cutting the whole section out and welding a new thicker plate on.
pros: eliminate the porous cracked TIG weld, have fresh smooth metal to weld new adapter onto, can relocate adapter towards middle of that rib section, stiffer mounting plate
cons: more time cutting, drilling & carefully matching the new plate, welding a large plate section that'll be submerged below oil level induces higher risk of oil leak if my welds ain't perfect.
- just cut the old adapter off and weld the new one straight over the previous TIG weld.
pros: quick & easy, less risk of oil leak
cons: welding over previous porous TIG weld (but can always apply more MIG weld), same thin sump sheet metal that can flex/crack
decided option 2 is best.