tazman7474: was that ZR rated and decent brand names? I opted for pirelli, avon, michelin, dunlop and bridgestone, ive found the cheeper makes delaminte if used on track and up the strip
tazman7474: ZR comes up with 4 results from all brands and trye type.. and one of those was YR LOL so leaves 3.. only 1 would be suitable as its a directional ( remember Im in UK so high chance of water on track) goodyear eagle F1.. good tyre too :o)
tazman7474: Thats what I done the first time, as i dont run the recommended size for my car (should be 45 profile) but the first time i ticked the all season boxs for tyre type to allow for our wet times LOL
Stevie: the goodyear looked like the best choice to me too! and it's in the range of what you said you spent anyways. if i check around with some of the guys, i can probably find a couple of sites that have them cheaper.
tazman7474: delivery would be a tad high from your side of the pond LOL Ive always found the bridgestone tyres a softer compound and wear quicker so that narrowed it down more
Stevie: sometimes you have to trade tire life for grip! if i could only come up with a compound that gripped like bubble gum and wore like cast iron, i'd be rich!
tazman7474: I found yokahama was great for grip :oD but just normal road use on my old car would wear them out in 10,000 miles. Now I have 4 wheel drive and do a fair bit of track etc, the cost etc would be silly. so ive found Avon zz3 tyres ( that site never came up with them lol) etc a reasonable compromise
Stevie: I'm running into that same problem with my yokahama's. They grip like crazy (80mph off ramps are no problem) but I think the compound is too soft as they wear quick as heck.
Also according to Avon's website (whom I've never heard of before lol) they do sell in the US but not all there sizes/compounds. The ZZ3 is only england.
one of my 4 camshafts picked up and momentarily siezed this morning, and threw the timing out on all 4 and the crankshaft :o(
Gonna strip some parts tomorrow and see if the valves etc survived the ordeal :o( luckily i was at low speed and revs
Kipling: material toothed belt, but it jumped teeth rather than tear teeth off.. or could have been much worse, as the cams have all gone about 25 degrees out, rather than sat still till pistons hit valves
tazman7474: hopefully just a tidy up of righ tbank i/l cam or replace it and the bearing cases may do the job ( that one is the one that picked up) cos its a major job working on these flat opposing four boxer engines :o(
tazman7474: for sure, but thats a massive job on these,, they get complicated with their "pull" clutches instead of "push " ones etc etc etc.. should only take a couple of hours to find out this way.
right bank inlet camshaft,, one of the journels must have had a foreign body get in the oil grrove.. clogged it,, it then ran dry and has damageed the bearing cap and the cam and filled the oil groove with metal :o(
gonna see if can salvage cam and head ( as there are no bearings, the cam runs direct on the aluminium cylinder head and cap)
Stevie: with a problem like that and seeing how close the tolerances are in the newer motors, i think you're looking at pulling the motor and checking everything for dirt and debris!
tazman7474: I would hope he has a warranty with that engine. If not...you are absolutly right. The engine oil passages all lead to the oil pan where it can be redistibuted to the crankshaft,main and connecting rod bearings.
At high rpms...a speck of debris is like a file.
tazman7474: afraid so.
A human hair can be as thick as 10 thousands of an inch thick. most rod and main clearances are 3 thousands of an inch. any more than that,and oil pressure starts to drop.
Running those mustangs...I'm sure you know all about that!! LOL
tazman7474: on an average... .003 will give you less break-in wear. but to each their own, huh?
Most of my rebuilds are commercial type.. (most boats run truck motors) with the occasianal high perf...which is almost always GM big blocks.
the foreign motors..ie: Subaru, way well be vastly different.
tazman7474: one of the guys in the garage works in a large dealership by day, he tell us that some of the new motors are running .0007-.001! that's why they run 5w-20 oil in them, 10w-40 won't even flow through the motor!
Kipling: actually i use 20-50, it's more stabil at tempurature and takes less hp to push throught the motor. remember, i run a restricted class, everything i can do to cut hp loss is actually a hp gain!
tazman7474: at higher temps the viscosity breakdown requires the heaveir oils. efi engines run a heck of alot hotter than naturally aspirated engines, yet OEM specs generlly call for thinner oils. this never made good sense to me. guess 100k is the life span OEM's hope to get, and new car purchases are then called for. They are designed to break down
I like to run road tar in mine, I like it STICK to the metal!!!
Na but I do run Mobil 1 full synthetic 10w-30 my car. 40k mines and after a quick wipe with a rag, you can eat off the valve covers. I spend most of my time over 5k rpms and have never had a problem (but then again it is a Toyota). I change my oil filter every 5k and the oil every 10k. I'm sold on synthetic!
Backoff: how does qt compare to UK litre?
Most engines here take 5 litres, but th eoil comes in 4.5 litre jugs and 1 litre. It cost me about £45 for 5litres (~$70)
Kipling: i got a short block. also its over a year since got it and near 20000miles since .. its out of the warrenty period etc, but also i only have damage to one of the cylinder heads, so they would throw it out even if I tried to claim etc..
Think by th etime the show season etc starts again, im gonna get my spare engine rebuilt ready incase lol especially as im meant to be doing a hill climb series also
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