The only thing that is somewhat proprietary on Max'd Out is the turbo setup's and that is for obvious reasons. That's Nathan's domain and any info there is at his discretion. As for the rest, we have had a ton of help and if we can save someone some grief or help with their build we'll do it.
In a twisted sense it was somewhat lucky the accident with the broken weld happened since it probably saves us a catastrophic failure and potential accident with the resultant oil down that would probably have happened.
so what everyone is saying..is having a built motor doesnt mean chit and it will still break if you push it at 1000hp? im just not clear. i figure built motor= stronger parts and less chance of breaking
Built motors make more power and are pushed harder. One of the big problems is it's still the same block. I think the block is past its limit.
enter the LML block.......
To be honest guys I'm totally amazed how strong these things are. We are pushing them what, 3 to 4 times what they were originally intended to do? We will continue to push them and find the next weakest link. That is the name of this crazy game we play and I'm be willing to bet, (although they would never admit it) there are GM engineers who watch our forums and threads to see what is happening in the big power game and we do influence their thinking when it comes to new designs.
well that's discouraging
edit:
yes, Thanks Ken for sharing here. on Rick's site you said the block was reusable though correct? so it didn't hurt the mains too bad just the bearings? i was digging up some old threads on cap-walk and crank-walk on the DP and there were a few who thought that the girdle wouldn't mitigate the Crank-walk. I hope that it does help you guys, as i was really thinking about using one myself in this build. would a better balancing job ( not the normal zero-balancing) maybe be more beneficial? I know the Kuselicks were trying some new things this year with their motor and as i understood it, they had it internally balanced and not to zero (don't know if i am explaining that right). i don't know if it is feasible for a drag motor or not, as i understand this is usually common practice for pullers.
:hug:
Everyone knows that LB7/LLY rods bend... so us LB7/LLY guys have to address that problem. LBZ/LMM guys have to address their crack prone pistons. The reality is so many things can and do go wrong in engines that cause catastrophic failures. We will never have it all figured out, just look at the Cummins guys their engines have been out a lot longer than ours and they still have large failures.
Sorry missed your edit. The shop we have working on the engines is a shop near Boise with a long and successful track record building big hp gasser race engines. Also a fair amount of work on diesels but nothing like Max'd Out. Block is fine. They seem to think the girdle will help what ours was doing a lot. Ours was moving side to side and not back and forth. They already had the main caps redone and everything aligned honed so the billet main caps will not go in this engine. The argument as I understand it before with billet main caps is the difficulty of getting them aligned honed perfect due to the difference in hardness of the material and the honing process walking a bit. I'm no machinist so if I'm explaining it wrong please correct me. Again we are at the 1300 hp mark with our engine. The first time we tried it at 100% power is when we broke the weld. The 9.71 pass was the #4 tune and Rob would have to tell you how much less it was than the full fuel tune.
Im not sure if its been said , but do you guys have main studs in max'ed out?
I thought about a girdle for a long time, didnt end up doing it this year, im afraid when you take the walk/flex out of the crank, you will just start getting more crank breakage, but i could be wrong, i hope theres more testing and it proves that girdles do help out. I think some of the breakage has to do with the gear drive up front.