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block honing qeustion

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    block honing qeustion

    so i just rebuilt my motor and honed it then i had to tear it apart 1000 miles down the road ,do you have to hone the block everytime you remove a piston , or can i get away with out having to hone it a second time
    Last edited by e30m20TurbO7; 02-13-2013, 10:19 PM.

    #2
    only if you change the rings.

    t
    now, sometimes I just mess with people. It's more entertaining that way. george graves

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      #3
      Most of the time these blocks are so clean they don't even NEED honing.

      A quite hit with a ball hone is the most you'd need but not likely if it were just done.
      BimmerHeads
      Classic BMW Specialists
      Santa Clarita, CA

      www.BimmerHeads.com

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        #4
        Originally posted by MR 325 View Post
        Most of the time these blocks are so clean they don't even NEED honing.

        A quite hit with a ball hone is the most you'd need but not likely if it were just done.
        The cross-hatch honing isn't so much to clean up the cylinders as it is to get new rings to seat. If you don't hone the cylinders the rings will take a long time to seat, if they ever do.

        As to the OP's question. Unless you are replacing the rings, they should be seated by now and there is no need to hone the cylinders.
        The car makes it possible, but the driver makes it happen.
        Jim Levie, Huntsville, AL

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          #5
          Originally posted by jlevie View Post
          If you don't hone the cylinders the rings will take a long time to seat, if they ever do.
          Well, you're wrong.
          BimmerHeads
          Classic BMW Specialists
          Santa Clarita, CA

          www.BimmerHeads.com

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            #6
            if the block is under 200k you dont really need to hone. check the straightness and see if the top of the cylinder has a lip developing. and then judge for yourself. but i highly recommend replacing the rings and bearings while you are there. and dont reuse the rod bolts. ( i have reused but was worried the whole time i ran them) they are TTY.
            Much wow
            I hate 4 doors

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              #7
              i will be tearing down a block soon. talked to a machine shop guy today. he said a good hone and new rings will be fine. Even the slightest bore with OE rings will work. Not a good idea to re-use the rod or crank bearings?

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                #8
                thanks a bunch everyone , yea i never have used rod bolts over , i would have been so pissed off at my self if i reused them and then had a rod knock a second time, no point in cheaping out on 70$ in bolts. i dont plan on buying new rings though since i had already ran this block with these rings and they're already seated to the cylinders , and what would the lip look like on the cylinder walls if there was one , like a lip that your fingernail could run across or something more suttle

                Originally posted by Cabriolet View Post
                if the block is under 200k you dont really need to hone. check the straightness and see if the top of the cylinder has a lip developing. and then judge for yourself. but i highly recommend replacing the rings and bearings while you are there. and dont reuse the rod bolts. ( i have reused but was worried the whole time i ran them) they are TTY.

                Originally posted by e30trooper View Post
                i will be tearing down a block soon. talked to a machine shop guy today. he said a good hone and new rings will be fine. Even the slightest bore with OE rings will work. Not a good idea to re-use the rod or crank bearings?

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by e30trooper View Post
                  i will be tearing down a block soon. talked to a machine shop guy today. he said a good hone and new rings will be fine. Even the slightest bore with OE rings will work. Not a good idea to re-use the rod or crank bearings?
                  Don't waste your time and money rebuilding an engine without replacing bearings.

                  Do it right or don't do it at all.
                  BimmerHeads
                  Classic BMW Specialists
                  Santa Clarita, CA

                  www.BimmerHeads.com

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by MR 325 View Post
                    Don't waste your time and money rebuilding an engine without replacing bearings.

                    Do it right or don't do it at all.

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