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Re: [Fot] Never be beaten by equipment

To: <fot@autox.team.net>
Subject: Re: [Fot] Never be beaten by equipment
From: "MadMarx" <tr4racing@googlemail.com>
Date: Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:45:32 +0200
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References: <1347376097.25948.YahooMailNeo@web125004.mail.ne1.yahoo.com> <000c01cd9031$6be63a60$43b2af20$@com> <0D69234D-7CD9-40D5-8F8D-C16F23DE91CE@virgin.net>
Thread-index: Ac2Q7FByTjwVO//HQx++OQ+Gw84m6AAAFbDQ
Quite low compression.

I read between 210 - 220 PSI at my engine with a compression of 11.3:1.

Maybe we have here Californian air too?

Chris

-----Urspr|ngliche Nachricht-----
Von: TR4 Tony [mailto:tr4.tony@virgin.net]
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 12. September 2012 15:33
An: MadMarx
Cc: <fot@autox.team.net>
Betreff: Re: [Fot] Never be beaten by equipment

Hi all

I use 89mm venolia pistons with .006 clearance and they seem to give me two
years before I start getting ring trouble, so far twice on cyl 4 where the
comp ratio drops from 165 to 115 and I start throwing oil from the rocker
/valve cover vent straight into the catch tank.

Cyl 2 comp falls to about 130 on my scale at the same time. 1 and 3 sit at
155 Ish. This seems to be the order of wear in my engine and a couple of
similar ones, so pretty consistent I'm told.

This is all due to accelerated ring wear due to heat in the rear of the
engine as others have said and if I let it go too far, scrap pistons as a
minimum. Provided I keep a tab on the comp ratios and measure what I pump
out of the catch tank I can keep track of wear on a relative scale,
recognising that if I do so I won't get a heavy failure. Short of solving
the issue finally this is the only way to deal with it, hence my bi annual
refit.

I'm getting two years worth of relatively trouble free running with my steel
crank, venolia pistons and carillo rods. That's about 18000 to 20000 rally
miles, maybe 10000 of those at 5000 rpm and above, 3000 at maximum attack of
6500 to 7500 and above (my counter reads to 6000 so when the beastie stops
accelerating and the noise doesn't get louder I know I'm on the peg).

I can forward the specs of the various bits if anyone else is interested.

Happy days.

Tony

Sent from my iPhone

On 11 Sep 2012, at 16:23, "MadMarx" <tr4racing@googlemail.com> wrote:

> I had the same trouble with Wiseco pistons.
> Maybe they expand a lot.
>
> I run as piston to wall clearance 0.13mm.
>
> Never believe what the piston manufacturer says.
> Won't work on a wet liner Triumph engine.
> The liners deform under heat and getting oval.
> More clearance is needed as normal.
>
> At the current engine I try to install old liners in the same
> direction when they were installed the first time in hope the deformation
is smaller.
>
> Chris
>
>
> -----Urspr|ngliche Nachricht-----
> Von: fot-bounces@autox.team.net [mailto:fot-bounces@autox.team.net] Im
> Auftrag von Robert Blake
> Gesendet: Dienstag, 11. September 2012 17:08
> An: fot@autox.team.net
> Betreff: [Fot] Never be beaten by equipment
>
> Pops and I had a less than excellent weekend at TWS it would true to
> say that we were beaten by equipment, one of us physically.
>
> We just put a new engine
> in Dads #14. The second one since December. We built this one with
> Wiseco pistons, stock liners bored to 87+.005 on 1-3 and +.006 on
> number 4. This resulted in the engine lasting most of the day Friday
> for test and tune. On his last run we did a plug check. We had been
> trying to dial in his mixture all day and moving from a lean condition
> as evidenced by previous plug cuts in the day. After adjusting the
> mixture, reinstalling the plugs, gapping points, and rechecking timing
> we started the engine to hear a horrible clatter from within. Same
> clatter that dad had heard at the Mitty so we feared the worst.
> Later that evening he and Bob Kramer confirmed that #4 piston skirt
> was scuffed again. The same thing happened on the previous engine at the
Mitty.
> Oil pressure was great all day (80 psi from 3000rpm up) the water temp
> never went above normal range.
>
> So other than lack of piston to liner clearance, what causes pistons
> skirts to scuff on the liner?  Can a lean mixture on the rear carb
> cause this without showing up as a hot running condition?
>
> On to my
> issue.
>
> My aluminum hood pins broke on the TR3 on the back straight.
> Unfortunately, the passenger hinge snapped but the drivers side did
> not. The hood bent back and slapped my helmet pretty good (beaten by my
equipment).
> Never thought of it that way before. Not pleasant. So I am in search
> of a decent bonnet. It is for a 58 TR3A. I am not too picky but
> proximity to TX is a major consideration.
>
> Info on both issues is appreciated.
>
> Greg
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