do i need to bore?
do i need to bore?
i just took my block to a local high performance machine shop. the guy said my cylinders were fine except that they were tapered .005 an inch below the ridge. The ridge cannot even be caught on a fingernail, so theres not much ridge. Will this require boring to .030 over or can i just do a light hone and use the stock standard sized pistons?
thanks
thanks
i don't have a manual sitting here but i beleive the spec is .003 taper or out of round, so if that's the caes you need overbored. the size of the ridge has little to do with the condition of the holes, other than being a wear indicator, or in other words the ridge isn't why you over bore. then again if you leave a ridge the top ring will crash into it when the piston comes up. if i don't bore a block i at the very least use a reamer on it to get the ridge out, and that's not 100% effective.
It's good to know the taper, but what about out-of-round? Typically, tapered bores will have roundness issues too.
0.005" taper is way out of spec, and you'll likely have some slap on a cold start. Personally, as long as the case is at the machine shop, I'd bore it to the next nominal oversize and enjoy the extra cubes. Ask them to use a torque plate when boring.
SBC pistons (and ring sets) are available in 0.005, 0.010, 0.020, 0.030, and even larger oversizes. 0.010" seems to be a common selection, and cast piston sets aren't that expensive.
0.005" taper is way out of spec, and you'll likely have some slap on a cold start. Personally, as long as the case is at the machine shop, I'd bore it to the next nominal oversize and enjoy the extra cubes. Ask them to use a torque plate when boring.
SBC pistons (and ring sets) are available in 0.005, 0.010, 0.020, 0.030, and even larger oversizes. 0.010" seems to be a common selection, and cast piston sets aren't that expensive.
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