LMM: Ever Seen a New Engine Do This?

DmaxLMM

New member
Aug 3, 2018
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Don't take this the wrong way, but I hope you talked with your builder before you came to the forum to have a bunch of strangers speculate on what happened with your motor. It is one thing to share what happened after the fact to educate and help spare someone the same fate or to come to the forum when you have exhausted all your options, but as a shop owner, I hate having someone come to me with "internet facts" before I even have a chance to look at their truck (whether they are a new customer or a return customer having an issue with previous work). Self educated or internet educated customers are some of the worst. Not because they know it all, but often the opinions they get online are different or in conflict with mine. Like I said, I don't mean to offend, and I hope you get your issues resolved. Best of luck to you. I'm sorry for your troubles; I know from experience that losing a built engine is never fun.

Absolutely talked with them, and still working through this. They were the first call, and until we figure the cause and resolution I am not posting any of the business' names on the forums. I was just wondering if anyone had seen something like this before.
 

dmaxstore

New member
Sep 15, 2010
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Do you know what type of coating was applied to the pistons?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

THEFERMANATOR

LEGALLY INSANE
Feb 16, 2009
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My 1st thought was it looked like it ingested sand or some sort of abrasive. If it was a piston to cylinder issue the 1st signs is normally aluminum stuck to the cylinder walls off of the piston skirt where clearance is the tightest, or at least gouging. Overheat will have similiar damage except the aluminum could be stuck anywhere. If it were rings I would expect to see a groove from where the rings but together cut into the cylinder wall. If it was something in the oil you would have lost oil pressure and damaged rotating assembly long before the cylinder walls. I spent alot of time working around "old timers" growing up, and this reminds me of a model T my grandfather worked on. The guy who owned it had heard some wives tail about using I believe it was baking soda to seal rings up and stop oil burning. He put some through it and scoured the cylinder walls up like this. Engine had very little compression, burned oil like crazy, and had this nice uniform wear marks in the cylinders. So I would say you either ingested something into the engine, or had a complete failure of your coating on the piston crowns.
 

PureHybrid

Isuzu Shakes IT
Feb 15, 2012
3,492
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Central OH
My 1st thought was it looked like it ingested sand or some sort of abrasive. If it was a piston to cylinder issue the 1st signs is normally aluminum stuck to the cylinder walls off of the piston skirt where clearance is the tightest, or at least gouging. Overheat will have similiar damage except the aluminum could be stuck anywhere. If it were rings I would expect to see a groove from where the rings but together cut into the cylinder wall. If it was something in the oil you would have lost oil pressure and damaged rotating assembly long before the cylinder walls. I spent alot of time working around "old timers" growing up, and this reminds me of a model T my grandfather worked on. The guy who owned it had heard some wives tail about using I believe it was baking soda to seal rings up and stop oil burning. He put some through it and scoured the cylinder walls up like this. Engine had very little compression, burned oil like crazy, and had this nice uniform wear marks in the cylinders. So I would say you either ingested something into the engine, or had a complete failure of your coating on the piston crowns.

Haha, funny you mention that about the baking soda. The old man said back when the chromoly rings started coming out they wouldn't seal easily, sprinkle some comet down the carb and rev the chit out of it :roflmao:
 

NC-smokinlmm

<<<Future tuna killer
May 29, 2011
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Haha, funny you mention that about the baking soda. The old man said back when the chromoly rings started coming out they wouldn't seal easily, sprinkle some comet down the carb and rev the chit out of it :roflmao:

Today it's called plateau honing...;)

Manufactures are doing that on new blocks during maching process to simulate 100,000 miles of wear, so ecomony is better...:mad:


If it was injestion then the oil will tell the tale for sure. Have you cut apart the oil filter?
 

kidturbo

Piston Tester
Jul 21, 2010
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I once fed a fresh 351 Cleveland a Big Mac and half order of fries on a bet. Snapped that 750 Holley wide open and tossed in four chunks. It never even burped.. Spared the coke chaser however since sugar crystallizes. Couple weeks later it broke the cam and grenaded, but the cylinder walls look perfect... :spit:

You'll find it, the evidence will be stuck to those rings.
 

cdbright

JUST RENT IT
Dec 16, 2008
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I once fed a fresh 351 Cleveland a Big Mac and half order of fries on a bet. Snapped that 750 Holley wide open and tossed in four chunks. It never even burped..



NOW THATS A QUOTE !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:thumb::thumb::thumb:
 
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THEFERMANATOR

LEGALLY INSANE
Feb 16, 2009
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Haha, funny you mention that about the baking soda. The old man said back when the chromoly rings started coming out they wouldn't seal easily, sprinkle some comet down the carb and rev the chit out of it :roflmao:

Old timers did some crazy stuff. Borax was another one they used.
 

WolfLMM

Making Chips
Nov 21, 2006
4,005
25
48
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AL
My buddy (who is a boat fanatic) told me they had a 1400hp bbc marine engine that wasn’t making the power it should, turns out couple of the cylinders were too high on compression, they drained the oil and ran the motor for 45secs, it evened out the compression on all cylinders and got the motor making the 1400hp it was supposed to make. Boat still runs 130mph to this day, 14 years later. Crazy ass stuff right there. Sorry for the off topic post.
 

malibu795

misspeelleerr
Apr 28, 2007
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in the buckeye state
My buddy (who is a boat fanatic) told me they had a 1400hp bbc marine engine that wasn’t making the power it should, turns out couple of the cylinders were too high on compression, they drained the oil and ran the motor for 45secs, it evened out the compression on all cylinders and got the motor making the 1400hp it was supposed to make. Boat still runs 130mph to this day, 14 years later. Crazy ass stuff right there. Sorry for the off topic post.
Stuff they don't teach in the classroom
 

jlawles2

Well-known member
Jan 28, 2010
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Borax was used on band brakes to stop them from squealing in the old friction rig machines when they were glazed over.

Some of that old school stuff is way easier and more useful when far away from home.
 

DmaxLMM

New member
Aug 3, 2018
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So just wanted to post an update in this thread. Oil analysis and engine analysis came back. Sending out the injectors today for testing. The tuner was one the engine builder recommended and is extremely well respected in the industry, it is not believed to be a tuning issue.

Oil:
ELEMENT TESTS
Water Neg
V100 14.02
Fe 249
Cu 8
Pb 9
Sn 3
Cr 14
Ni 1
Ti 0
Al 3
Si 32
Na 2
K 5
B 75
Ca 1380
Mg 759
P 782
Zn 851
Mo 1
Li 0
Sb 1
Ba 0
Cd 0
Mn 4
Ag 0
V 0
pqL Index 24
Soot 6
OXI 14
NIT 8
Sulf 20
AW 17
FT-IR Glycol 0
FT-IR Water 29


COMMENTS
Silicon (Si) is high. Silicon to aluminum (Al) ratio is acceptable. Dirt entry is not indicated. Silicon may be due to chemical leaching from silicone gaskets, seals or sealer compound. Has there been recent repair activity? If so, these results are typical after a recent repair.However iron (Fe) and chrome (Cr) are extremely high indicating piston ring and liner/cylinder wall wear.Total Ferrous Debris (pqL) index appears acceptable.These results could be due to the break-in period. However this is very severe wear which is not likely due to the break-in period. Additional inspection - including disassembly and inspection - may be necessary.



Motor was torn down by a 3rd party builder, then shipped 2 pistons back to Mahle for analysis. Initial response from the motor builder was that it was put together very loose. Here is the Mahle report:

Description of Running Conditions:
Street driven and used for towing trailer.

Run Time:
Freshly assembled motor with approx. 2600 miles.

Description of Failure or Concern:
Motor had low power and started burning excessive amounts of oil soon after break-in. Pulled heads and found all piston bore’s were scorched equally.

Parts returned:
Pistons, pins, clips and rings from 2 cylinders (#4 and #5).

piston.jpg

1. Build-up of carbon on the fireland was making contact with the cylinder and can result in carbon cutting at the cylinder surface.
2. 100% face wear of the top ring was observed around the entire circumference.
3. 50% face wear of the second ring was present in most areas. Wear percentage of the 2nd ring showed some variation around the circumference and was near 100% at the gaps.
4. MAHLE second ring had been machined to accept a spacer rail for a gapless conversion (assumed to be Total Seal). Depth of the spacer register was visually correct (no rail protrusion).
5. 100% face wear of the oil ring scraper edges. Non-tapered design, but each scraper edge is radiused when new. Edges were worn sharp.

Possible causes of abnormal, premature ring wear:
 Ring butting
 Introduction of debris/abrasives through the intake system
 Poor cleaning prior to assembly; foreign debris remaining in engine
 Improper honing or incorrect cylinder surface finish
 Dilution or lack of proper lubrication

Probable causes that can be eliminated by analysis:
 Ring butting – No evidence of ring butting. The top ring in particular had a significant build-up of carbon present at the gap surfaces.
 Introduction of foreign debris, either through intake or remaining in engine – relatively good condition of skirts, ring lands and crown do not support this mechanism.

Probable causes that CAN NOT be eliminated by analysis:
 Improper Honing
o Typical description: The piston rings present scratches on the running surface, mainly the ones in the first groove.
o Probably Causes: Too high roughness will result in high wear and will be abrasive to the running face of the piston ring. Too low roughness makes piston ring seating difficult and retains less lubricating oil on the cylinder walls. Cylinder surface after honing should be measured to characterize the surface finish in terms of Ra, Rz, Rpk and Rvk.
Cylinder wall finish with smeared material: If graphite in the cylinder material became covered by smeared metal due to poor honing process, proper ring operation is compromised and can lead to scuffing due to a decrease in oil retention. Exposed graphite provides lubrication but also acts like a sponge to absorb and hold lubrication.

 Fuel dilution
o Typical description:
(1) The wear pattern on the skirt is wide, shiny and shows deep scoring marks along the entire piston skirt.
(2) Scoring marks on the piston rings, possibly additional burn marks on the piston ring surface.
(3) The honing in the cylinder liner or cylinder running surface is heavily worn.
(4) Heavy wear marks are visible at the piston pin w/ visible pitting in the pin bore.


o Probable Causes: An excessive amount of fuel in the oil dilutes the oil film, thus drastically reducing its load bearing ability and increasing engine component wear. This type of damage can have the following causes:
The injection system is set incorrectly
Cold start enrichment is too rich
The injection nozzles are functioning incorrectly, e.g. due to a clogged fuel filter
Due to an excessive protrusion, the piston hammers the cylinder head, causing uncontrolled injection.
The compression is weak. This can be further attributed to the following conditions:
A leaking valve
The cylinder head gasket is leaking
The timing is set incorrectly
The protrusion is too small
One piston ring or several piston rings are defective
 

LBZ

Super Moderator
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Jul 2, 2007
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So end of the day it is either poor machining or fuel dilution then?
 

kidturbo

Piston Tester
Jul 21, 2010
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Am I the only one who finds the "comments" from oil annalist a bit concerning?

First sentence states: Silicon (Si) is high. SiC is the primary make up of TBC..

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silicon_carbide

Chemical breakdown of modern ceramic piston coatings found in a PDF listed here.
https://www.iiste.org/Journals/index.php/JSTR/article/view/25396

Do you have any new pics of the piston tops after removed?

I ask, because last night I just pulled heads on my first engine with 15 dyno pulls, TBC is chipping... And,I personally wouldn't trust Mahle to analyze my hair color.