Definitely pullimh pilot timing back.Are you going to detune it, Adam?
I'd still do a torque plate, just use an old set of stock head bolts at stock torque with the torque plate. It might not do anything, but if it does, you've accounted for it.
It is a bit strange that the ring gaps opened up that much. That implies there is a decent amount of ring wear going on. Maybe it is just the constant high load the engine sees, but that seems a bit quick, even with your use.
That's a good question. I never thought about that, maybe the rings are a softer material?How does the 41909 mahle rings compare to stock?
That's a good question. I never thought about that, maybe the rings are a softer material?
That's a good question. I never thought about that, maybe the rings are a softer material?
That would make sense why the top ring ran away with wear vs second ring barely grew in ring gap
What about the 42160?
I'd say if the upper ring on the #42160 is stainless AND nitride hardened that would be one tough sob
This paragraph makes my point. 2 or 3 weeks is because you rebuild them yourself. A long block can be swapped in a day if your working diligently. And a longblock doesn't cost anywhere near $10,000. More like 7000ish. And bam your back on the road.
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Passenger side
all glow plugs in while doing the test
8 pulses/compression cycles each cylinder.
1: 360
3: 350
5: 300
7: 310
Getting ready to do driver side.. though 6 pack says ill see similar readings..
Forgot to post ring gaps
Took a piston and shoved them down until top of wrist pin was flush with deck
Old
1st .023"
2nd .024
New rings
1st .018
2nd .024
Both ring sets where mahle #41909
Id Say the .023" gap on the top ring allowed the carbon/gum up of the secondary causeing it to stick and increase blow by
Haha those are way tighter gaps than mine. I'm around .030 lol .009- .010 ptw
So do you think was causing the lack of power? I really don't think the ring gap is