Re: 288 Rebuild
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Home away from home
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you can look at Hastings for the rings
hastingsmfg.com/
Posted on: 2010/12/11 21:05
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Re: 288 Rebuild
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Home away from home
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Kanter offers 3 different O/H kits that look like a good value, and it won't be a "shot in the dark" if you are getting the right parts or not.
kanter.com///productdetail.aspx?Tg=72219 ... &MDv=1&MDpt=0&MSb=0&Cat=31&Prc=1655 Not sure if Egge, Max Merrit & others have kits, you can call and inquire. You might want to tear it down and see exactly what is kaput and go from there, but once it is down might as well do it right if you plan on keeping the car..."in for a dime, in for a dollar" Let us know what you find.
Posted on: 2010/12/11 21:48
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Re: 288 Rebuild
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Forum Ambassador
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I don't know the ring interchange but the various service counselor issues with mechanical specifications info available for download in the literature section have the width specs. Summitt has the details on the ones they sell and by sorting down, you might be able to cross there or at another parts store. Price runs the gamut from roughly $50 to over 130 for a set of 3 1/2" at Summitt. I would imagine the other aftermarket stores would be comparable.
Kanters price of $69 may not be too out of line and at least you know you would get a correct set without a lot of guessing. As Packard8 mentions, it would not be out of the question if you found other surprises when you open it up--particularly if it is high mileage.
Posted on: 2010/12/11 22:21
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Howard
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Re: 288 Rebuild
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Home away from home
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Last year I got rings for my 288 from Egge. They knew exactly what questions to ask and the rings were correct. I would suggest tearing the engine down completely before you buy anything. You may save money overall by getting a different used engine, assuming yours needs major work (rebore, crankshaft, etc.).
Posted on: 2010/12/13 10:56
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Fred Puhn
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Re: 288 Rebuild
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I forget, is this engine already disassembled? If the intention is to put new rings in used pistons, I'd advise strongly against buying rings until the pistons have been removed and examined. For one, they may be replacement pistons which take different rings. Second the engine may have been bored oversize which you'd have to know beforehand. And another consideration is the condition of the ring grooves; if they are worn beyond service limits then the grooves would have to be recut oversize and the rings equipped with spaces. And all of that assuming the pistons are in reuseable condition. Remove the pistons and evaluate what you have before you order.
Posted on: 2010/12/13 11:16
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Re: 288 Rebuild
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Home away from home
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Inquiring minds want to know--just how did it so suddenly bite the dust? These babies usually give lots of warning before taking a total dump.
Posted on: 2010/12/13 15:54
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Re: 288 Rebuild
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Forum Ambassador
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....before taking a total dump.
Such eloquence!
Posted on: 2010/12/13 16:08
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Re: 288 Rebuild
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Home away from home
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"suddenly bite the dust" is a matter of opinion I suppose... I mean, it is an all original engine, never been opened up, that sat in a barn for 25 years. It only has 75,000 miles on it, and ran like new though, no problems at all. Then one night I was on the highway and it started to knock real bad and was billowing smoke out the exhaust pipe like a friggin freight train. I'm leaning towards a trany problem as far as the knock goes now, seeing as it only occurs when the car is in gear and not when its parked in neutral. I'm pullinng the engine it shop class after winter break is over and I'm going to tear it down. I might throw a T10 or a Saginaw behind it as well if the trans turns out to be bad too.
Posted on: 2010/12/19 1:52
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Re: 288 Rebuild
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Forum Ambassador
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It only has 75,000 miles on it,
It's worth remembering that although today 100,000 miles on an engine is not considered a lot, in that era it was considered very high mileage and many engines of many makes required a rebuild or partial rebuild before than kind of mileage accumulated - at least a valve grind or two and rings.
Posted on: 2010/12/19 9:22
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