I ran into a completely unrelated cold start issue on the twins that makes me think more deeply about this bearing change.
With the huge external oil coolers [2quarts], 12AN lines, and HP6 style filters mounted higher than the block ports , I knew cold starts might be an issue. So I found a non-drainback version of the oil filters. On first start, I had to crack the filters loose to just clear the air lock while cranking. It wouldn't make pressure after several attempts.
Ok not a big deal, until I let them set for a few weeks and noticed on next fire, took several seconds to make pressure. Besides the ecm gauge, I have old-school safety switches hooked to fuel pumps and a light on dash. The idiot light told the tale, gauge reading was true. Weird, maybe filter was leaking off. So changed em, and same thing. Drain back betwen pickup to pump must be trapping air before the pump, and the filter design sure wasn't helping matters.
For a fix, I went back to a standard HP6 style without the rubber drain back preventer. Still takes a bit to make pressure if ya let em set for a month, but now i can pull the ecm fuse and crank em till they the light goes out. From then on, they are good with no delay at cranking.
What I thought was a great idea at the time, ended up being a possible major problem. It takes about 10-20psi to push that spring loaded rubber seal inside those special filters open. Whatever is happening inside the pump, is allowing air around the gears. The pump couldn't clear it because the filter was holding the inlet line closed until it makes pressure.. Can't make pressure cause air in the pump. And only a paranoid engineer would realize what was actually happening to his grand design..
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