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died on the dyno. your veiws please

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    #46
    ^ Once the bearing contacts the journal it's all over. After that, yes the bearing starts getting hammered on and will eventually vacate the journal area completely.

    Sustained high RPM, no load (coast down) is hard on bearings as well.
    So is sustained high load at low RPMs. Both of these situations can be created on the dyno and can contribute to rod bearing stress.
    Lorin


    Originally posted by slammin.e28
    The M30 is God's engine.

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      #47
      Sounds like the engine wasn't properly broken in.

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        #48
        Originally posted by Mlarsen View Post
        Sounds like the engine wasn't properly broken in.

        Whaaat?

        Rod bearings don't break in.
        Lorin


        Originally posted by slammin.e28
        The M30 is God's engine.

        Comment


          #49
          Originally posted by LJ851 View Post
          hmm What was the clearance you measured on the offending journal? Detonation is very hard on rod bearings, do any of the other rod bearings show contact?

          Also, the dyno is harder on an engine than real life but the stress can be minimized. Did he put the car in neutral as the dyno coasted down after pulls or leave it in gear and let the engine come down with the dyno?





          .
          going from memery the clearance is .0020 to .0055. my bearings were between .0025 and .0050. the tight one was obviously .0025. all other bearings still look fine. i didnt notice if he was coasting down in gear or not.

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            #50
            Thats pretty tight. On your future engine builds, it's generally best on a performance engine to run the high side of the rod bearing spec if possible.

            What are your plans for the car now? Rebuild this engine or go another direction?
            Lorin


            Originally posted by slammin.e28
            The M30 is God's engine.

            Comment


              #51
              when i was putting it together i had alot of drive to finish as i wanted to see what it was like. i spent money i didnt have to finish it. right now im totally not interested in it. i already have a new crank and bearings so ill put it back together one day, just dont know when.

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                #52
                is it possible some debris stuck behind that bearing is what caused it to be tighter than the rest?

                I remember mine being right in the middle of the tolerance range.
                Build thread

                Bimmerlabs

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                  #53
                  def not. this is a ground crank. i even had it checked and polished but some were big some werent. id like to think matey did the damage and it wasnt something i did but at the end of the day im just going to have to sort it out when i can. thats the trouble with modifying engines i guess.

                  Comment


                    #54
                    Originally posted by 329jay View Post
                    thats the trouble with modifying engines i guess.
                    This is true. Some people would say i am cynical and nontrusting of other peoples work but in reality i think my attention to detail is a little stronger than others. When i send a rod out to get the big end resized to xxx for some crazy reason i expect it to come back xxx, not xxx in one dimension and .0015 inches off in another dimension!

                    This sounds silly but it happens all the time , even with competent, high end machine shops. Always check the work you have done for you, it will save you tears later on.

                    Assembling an engine doesn't sound like a big deal but building one where you know every single important aspect of it and are 99.9 percent sure it will produce the power and not fail is a whole 'nother animal. This is from experience, i have built several non stock high performance engines a year for the last 10 years or so.
                    Last edited by LJ851; 11-03-2011, 07:26 PM.
                    Lorin


                    Originally posted by slammin.e28
                    The M30 is God's engine.

                    Comment

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