UPDATE:
https://www.britishcarforum.com/bcforum/ubbthreads.php/topics/650142
swift6 said:
How many engines have you rebuilt?
Depends on your definition of "rebuilt" and "engine". I helped my husband build 2 wankel rotary engines. I didnt have to worry about any pistons in that one. I didnt really help with the 2.0 4 cylinder 2001 dodge neon engine, but I did see it progress. I witness my husband take apart a mustang v6, bmw i6, and a porsche v8. But by "apart", I mean the engine was not pulled, and the block itself was left alone in the car.
I helped my husband built my 5.0 mustang engine, which was a complete swap. Total hot rod stuff. 1986 block, performance cam, under drive pulleys, 2001 explorer heads, 1993 intake, whole bunch of other goodies. It was pretty reliable until it spun a bearing. Yes, you could say it was our fault, but technically this engine exchanged several hands before we got it, and one of the bolts wasnt torqued down to spec. It was one of those, we trust the guy, so why check. (actually my husband apparently checked a couple and since those were good, he assumed they all were.) It had 3,000 miles on it, so we knew it ran. One of the bolts was found in the oil pan itself. But since I knew something was up (gauge), there was no damage done to the engine. The crank was fine. After a new bearing set, the car has been reliable ever since. This is my daily driver. Its been a year since the swap, but then again, Ive only put 2000-3000 miles on it.
swift6 said:
How many GT6/TR6 cranks do you think they turn on a regular basis? On uncommon engines, they may just take you at your word that you know what you’re doing and what you’re asking for. Especially if you insist that you do and they are only turning the crank for you. Did you give them any information on the crank? Was it right? You already said you had the wrong dimensions at first yourself.
I didnt give them any dimensions at all. When I found the wrong dimensions it was AFTER I got it back home. When I said what I said, I meant that if youre an oil lube, and some guy brings in a ferrari testarossa, and youve never seen one, let alone worked on one, you have no record of how many quarts youre supposed to put in it, and if you !@#$ something up, odds are you cant go down to autozone and get a replacement, I "assume" you are going to either ask the owner questions, or find some other way to research your answer.
I mean, thats not really a good analogy as normally youd just read the dipstick, but Ive heard of lubes that assume certain vehicles held certain amounts of oil, and added oil based on that belief alone.... ...even chains
swift6 said:
If they had the block they probably would have measured it to see if it needed align-honing. After all, if it did it would be more work for them and that’s why they are there. They also would have been able to measure the difference between the bore in the mains and the journals on the crank and know definitively what size bearings would be needed.
I doubt these people measured anything at all. They are a performance shop that claim they work on everything but seem to specialize in mustangs. I only used them because they were the only shop who would even touch my mustang, because despite being a mustang, its apparently "special." I called around, asked tons of hobbyists/enthusiasts, they all recommended this place, and none of them knew a place that would machine a crank. I wanted my block hot tanked and I couldnt even find one. I even called a speed shop thats been around since the 50s, and they for some reason didnt even know one. Anyway, this shop would not refer me either, but offered to send it off for me. A little odd, but I guess they thought they were doing me a favor since I just happened to be there, with the crank in my trunk.
They can program a car... ...since late model vehicles have all the fancy computerized gizmos, but somehow they find ways to break things. Its odd, I know a great mechanic, but you dont want to use him for anything electrical. This shop is good with electrics, but you dont want to use them for mechanical.
They are so recommended that you have to schedule your appointments months on advance! Sure if youre a repeat customer, and youre having a problem, they'll fit you in, but man, 3 months in advance for a tune and dyno! They are so busy that if they received my crank with a tag that says .010, Im pretty sure they arent going to measure, assuming it is in fact .010, let alone do ANYTHING with my block had I given it to them.
poolboy said:
UmmYeahOk, you said..
"We're a special type of hobbyists. We sell working engines and scrap none working ones."
How do you go about evaluating these engines, anyway ? Is it just a matter of whether they run or not ?
Well, lets see, the v6 had 167,000 miles on it. It was well maintained as Ive owned it for 10 years before it was pulled. It was VERY reliable. It was only pulled because no one respects a v6 mustang, and this daily driver was also a show car that has done a few autocrossing. Despite being such a GOOD engine, it was 145hp stock, so anyone who needed to swap in another motor typically just upgraded to a v8 anyway. It spent a year in my garage taking up valuable space. I almost scrapped this but thankfully it found a new home. $100
My husband flooded his neon engine, literally. There was no way to avoid this, trust me. It bent two pistons, but luckily didnt harm the cylinder wallas or anything else. He bought brand new pistons, head bolts, all sorta of stuff like that from mopar. He rebuilt that while swapping in another neon engine he found in a junk yard that cost him as much as the parts for the other engine. He rebuilt the flooded engine and kept it thinking he needed a spare engine around because he was going to turbo it, and being the "family sedan" wanted one in stock in case something happen. Since the car was the reliable "family sedan" he decided to just sell the turbo, and the motor. We had that thing for a year, thought about tossing that one too. Like the mustang, why that engine when there are RT and SRT engines available? No idea if it ran or not after the rebuild as we never tested it. Pretty sure it did thought. Sold it for $100-150 (dont remember)
Rotary engine. One was a turbo build, sold it with the car. $1000 My husband wanted to do a total restoration on this car so with everything stripped, without fixing everything that was wrong with it one by one, there was no way of knowing what was wrong with the car. So after the rebuild, the car wouldnt start. Since he rewired his engine harness during the exact same time as the rebuild, there was no way of trouble shooting what was wrong since EVERYTHING had changed.
The other rotary, NA, everyone wants the turbo motor, so why keep they NA? $50 for the aluminum housings, $20 for the irons. We kept two rotors for paper weights
When I said "special kind of hobbyists" I meant that we have limited garage space. We have a 2 car garage, which in most households, people park just ONE car. We park two. Due to all our special tools and equipment, I have to squeeze out of my mustang, and walk around the house and enter through the front door because I cant walk past the bikes and other crap to enter the door thats 5 ft away. Most hobbyists I know either dedicate half, or all the garage to just one car that they are restoring. Since we charish our daily drivers, we dont do this.
vettedog72 said:
I all ways use those little strips of plastic (plasta guage? {this stuff has to be fresh too}) to measure the bearing gap. It requires torquing the bolts to the spec. Calipers need calibration and as a hobbyist I never send them off for the service. So I use them as a reference, not as an accurate, absolute measurement. Also, using the plastic strips takes the math out of the equation. ha
Thats what we tried to do. We got the plastigauge to work on my mustang but on the triumph is didnt even press, the bearings buckled