:::RHMT::: Real Home Made Turbo
General Category => Hybrid/Tech => Topic started by: d112crzy on July 11, 2009, 08:27:55 PM
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rebuilding a block for a friend. The guy who built it last managed to fuck it up and the motor nearly locked up.
Anyways, here's a pic of 1 of the main bores. This is the only one that's fucked up. Could I get away with just replacing the bearings and calling it a day or should I get this align honed and go with OS bearings?
(https://realhomemadeturbo.com/forum/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fi64.photobucket.com%2Falbums%2Fh193%2Fd112crzy%2FMotorbuilds083.jpg&hash=6b2ab89fa9c1afdfd0168ff5aaa9a3e6ad4dc379)
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Your goals/cash are key in your choice
Hope it runs and have almost nothing in it
or
have it last for years to come
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Your goals/cash are key in your choice
Hope it runs and have almost nothing in it
or
have it last for years to come
That's pretty much what I told him. Either HOPE it lasts, or do it right. Doing it right is definitely not going to be cheap.
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In reality its cheaper just to buy another used block unless its a dohc vtec motor
How does the crank looked
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In reality its cheaper just to buy another used block unless its a dohc vtec motor
How does the crank looked
The block is sleeved, so no it's not cheaper to just buy another block. It's an H22 motor. The crank is fine. It's recently been micropolished and balanced to 8k rpms.
The motor spun the bearing when it was stock. Then it got built, but the guy who built it didn't know wtf he was doing. The motor started for 2 minutes and leaked 2 quarts of oil, idled at 2.4k, had a loud whining/howling noise, tbelt was unbelievably tight, head bolts were loose, inside of motor was SUPER dirty and just about every other bolt was pretty loose. Except the front motor mount, that one was pretty tight.
Now it's in my hands and will make sure it runs right and lasts.
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Fuck that sucks. I would have it honed and call it a day. it would suck to put all the time int building it to have it just eat its self all over again because he didn want to spend 120 at the machine shop. Take it to DG machine in auburn, great work and garage sale pricing. You might have to wate a month to get it but it will be tits when you get it back.
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Yeah, I was thinking either DG or auburn auto machine. I think DG is the more expensive one, but they do really good work. I'm building anther motor currently and that's where I took it to get bored/honed.
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What's wrong with it? Put a bearing in it and run it.
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Was all the wear on the main bearings? If so, align bore that bitch. Regardless, have a machinist look at it: sometimes they come back from sleeving and check out flush at the apex of the main journals, but if you check against the sides the main bore is fucked up.
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DG is cheaper than AAM
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hmm. then it must be the other way around. I think they charged something like 25/cylinder to bore/hone, and the other one charged like 250 or something.
Either way, my opinion is to take it to the machine shop and get it taken care of. I'll talk to the guy and see what he wants to do. I'll make him sign a waiver just to keep myself safe, friend or no friend.
And yeah, the wear was on the mains. The idiot who put the motor together used .25 OS bearings, which now are all scarred. Not deep, but the motor wouldn't have lasted long like that. Here's a pic of one of the main bearings. The rest are a tad worse, or just as bad. The motor had >5miles and less than 10 minutes of idling.
(https://realhomemadeturbo.com/forum/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fi64.photobucket.com%2Falbums%2Fh193%2Fd112crzy%2FMotorbuilds080.jpg&hash=93b7b60d611d6f81f386ee5bc16354d0d572cd19)
Keep in mind, the oil was SUPER dirty, so that might have been what caused those scarring. I did calculations and the clearances were all super tight. I'm wanting to aim for a .0015" clearance on the mains
The rest of the main bores look ok, just not sure if they're true. The measurements I took are all within limits.
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If the block needs align honing just get a new block.
There are very very few machine shops setup to align hone motors that have steel caps and aluminum blocks (aka almost every Honda motor), and ever fewer people that know how to do it well.