Re: New rings
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Home away from home
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You didn’t replace the head gasket? That’s really a “must” as once it crushes, it stays crushed. Also, with so little clearance as it is between the valves and combustion chamber, I hope they are not hitting. Lots on this site about how to test the clearance but it does involve removing the head again.
Posted on: 7/7 11:00
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Re: New rings
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Home away from home
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What steps did follow to put the new rings in?
Re-using as head gasket is very likely to lead to trouble. Not reaming any ridge and honing the cylinders is likely to lead to trouble. Re-using old rod inserts is likely to lead to trouble. Not carefully checking the condition of the pistons and carefully fitting the new rings is likely to cause trouble. Mixing parts and not putting used parts back exactly as they were before is certain to cause trouble. Did you take any pictures?
Posted on: 7/7 11:30
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Re: New rings
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Not too shy to talk
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I was under the assumption that these metal head gaskets can be reused? There was a very small ring ridge, not enough that I was ever worried about when rebuilding other engines. Yes I use the same connecting rod inserts because they looked almost new, did install them with assembly lube to protect them. The cylinders were honed before the pistons went back in to clean the walls. The new rings I got were front grants and look to be nos from the 50s or 60s and have springs behind the oil ring and the second compression ring which seems to be why the fit is so stiff.
Posted on: 7/7 11:48
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Re: New rings
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Home away from home
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No gasket, even solid copper crush gaskets, should ever be reused. For head gaskets, the metal is only on the outside but there is a thin layer of something softer and crushable inside. It was probably once asbestos but not sure what’s being used today.
As for the rings, being in an original box does not necessarily mean that they are the proper size or even NOS. Buying newly manufactured rings is a better way to be assured of getting the proper size. For the bearings, you need to check them with Plasti-gauge before you can know if they are good or not. These are good, solid and well-built engines but shouldn’t be put together with assumption and guessing.
Posted on: 7/7 12:20
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Re: New rings
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Forum Ambassador
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Another thing to consider with a newly tight engine is the electrical and particularly the condition of the starter motor. Starter could have a lot of mileage and be in need of a rebuild. Worn bushings which are letting the armature drag are another possibility. On a loose engine a starter issue would not be as noticeable as it would be with the sudden added stress of a lot more load. Marginal battery cable size or battery capacity and condition could also be a factor with the added load.
Posted on: 7/7 12:21
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Howard
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Re: New rings
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Quite a regular
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Did you grind your rings to obtain proper gap? .0045"/inch of piston diameter on standard cast aluminum, .006"/per inch of diameter on hypereutectic pistons. Did you lube piston packs when installing?
Battery condition and starting motor performance are important. Replace that headgasket. While the head is off, squirt some oil on top of the pistons, and crank engine and see if it is still cranking hard. If it is....start over, something is wrong.
Posted on: 7/7 15:25
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Re: New rings
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Not too shy to talk
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The gaping seemed fine but no I did not gauge it. The box listed as standard and they were individually packaged in a 3 ring package, oil ring and the two compression rings plus springs. Given they were still in original packaging, new, and marked as standard I figured it was a pretty safe bet they haven't been swapped, even verified the sizing with a standard set so I know it's not the rings running into each other. The car has 46k miles on it and has been sitting pretty much untouched since 71. Right now the starter can manage maybe a engine revolution per second. Where is a place to get a new head gasket and are they really running 150 dollars plus?
Posted on: 7/7 16:03
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Re: New rings
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Home away from home
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Used pistons usually have carbon deposits in the ring grooves. If you put new rings on the pistons without cleaning out all the carbon, the new rings will probably be too tight in the lower part of the cylinder bores, especially if any of the new rings needed needed their gaps corrected.
An engine with less that 50,000 miles should not need new rings. Your engine may have had stuck or gummed rings. I would not start the engine with a used head gasket in place, and I would not start the engine without finding out why it is so stiff. Starting the engine with mis-fit parts could do major damage in a few seconds.
Posted on: 7/7 17:30
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Re: New rings
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Not too shy to talk
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The main reason I went with me rings was low compression numbers during testing and seeing blow by coming out of the oil fill tube. This isn't my first engine as I've built several over the years, just not a straight 8 on an old 6 volt system. I'm not sure what the RPM should be for a good strong starter but even before I replaced the rings it wasn't really flinging the engine over that fast. I did go through and thoroughly clean the ring grooves of carbon build up as well. Also when I had pulled the old rings of they just didn't feel like they had that much spring to them.
Posted on: 7/7 18:15
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