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Re: securing thrust washers

To: Gt6steve@aol.com, FOT@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: securing thrust washers
From: chasgee@aol.com
Date: Sun, 17 Jul 2005 20:58:02 -0400
The ones I've had in the past were made of brass secured with brass countersunk 
screws.  I thinnk the screws were #8s, with the countersink in the brass 
manufactured "thrust washer".
 
Still seems like a strange failure mode.  I've run them as tight as 0.004 
before without problems.  Of course, you make a heck of a lot more power than I 
do!
 
Hope this helps,
 
Chuck
 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: Gt6steve@AOL.COM
To: FOT@autox.team.net
Sent: Sun, 17 Jul 2005 13:00:27 EDT
Subject: securing thrust washers


Greetings Amici,
 
Last race the GT6 endured the destruction of the thrust face on my  brand new 
hi-Dollar crankshaft.  Initially I suspected I'd put the rear  thrust washer 
in backwards but when I found it in the pan I confirmed this was  not the 
case.  As yet, I don't have a theory as to why it failed but I'm  leaning 
toward 

inadequate clearance for the RPM's.  It was right at  .006.
 
My proposed solution will be to grind the crank rear thrust face smooth  
again and add a spacer behind the rear thrust washer to compensate.  I'm  
looking 
to set the block up in the drill press and bore both faces from the top  in 
the relieved area of the washers.  Here's where I get a bit loose.   I'm 
imagining I'd use brass flathead screws in probably 6-32  thread????????  
Anybody 
have any suggestions or comments on how they did  it?  I've read for years 
these 

need to be "silver-pinned" but I've no clue  what that is?
 
Any help would be appreciated...
 
Thanx, Steve Smith

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