LBZ: Stock Rebuild

Doms

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Apr 23, 2020
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I cracked a piston on my LBZ and I am looking to do a fairly stock rebuild. The truck is used mainly as a daily driver and does a little bit of towing from time to time. For discussion sake I'll say reliable power goal of 450HP. I am tuned for more than that now with EFI live and a DSP5 but I stay out of it. If anything I would do away with the "race" tune.

I plan on rebuilding the oil cooler, replacing the water pump, replacing most fasteners with new OEM (heads, mains, rods, cam, crank, converter), sending the block and heads out for inspection and machining and then using Mahle cast pistons and gaskets and Clevite P series bearings for re-assembly.

Is the oil pump serviceable or is it just a replace it type of part? This motor had low miles (80,000) so everything is looking pretty good (aside from piston #6 haha).

At what power level should one start to seriously consider going to performance cast pistons and head studs? Would either of these be much of a benefit now?

What else should I be looking at upgrading while I have this thing torn apart? My priorities are: reliability, cost, performance - in that order. I do not want to cut corners anywhere, I'm just not looking for a high dollar build.

I know that I have a lot of questions, and I have a ton more but Ill leave it at that for now and appreciate any help/advice I can get. Thanks.
 

Chevy1925

don't know sh!t about IFS
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you're on a good track.

i would buy the mahle race cast pistons though. then you gain the benefit of having a better piston than you had before (stock replacement mahles are just that).

oil pump is not servicable so pick up a new one. oil cooler, i would look into a 17-19 trucks cooler as its direct bolt on with a few longer bolts and has more capacity for oil cooling. 2020 one will fit but requires different gaskets, longer bolts, different elbow and must run 2020 style oil filters but it is even better than the 17-19.

key the crank and cam, the pins like to bend or fail and it can take the vavles/pistons out.

you will probably get guys saying to do headstuds but imho, at that power level, stock is just fine. run a good mahle/victor reinz head gasket (you will need to decide A, B, C, or D). if the block is getting decked, you would need to measure piston protrusion on reassembly to figure out the right HG thickeness for you.

as for what power level you need head studs, well that depends on how you achieve your power. boost doesnt kill HG, high drive pressure does. so if you try driving the hell out of the stock charger with lots of fuel, probably going to lift a head. if you put twins on or bigger single and have tuning correct, they can hold some power. If you want a number to go by since you have this thing apart, if you plan to push over 550hp at any point down the road, do the head studs now. if you actually plan to stay at 450hp, its not needed

who is assembling it?
 

Doms

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That's exactly the kind of advice I am after. Thank you.

I was kind of at a toss up between the cast and performance cast. Seeing as that is what I broke, it makes sense to upgrade.

For measuring piston protrusion, I was planning on using a dial indicator to reference the block and then measure the piston above the wrist pin. Is this typically how it is done?

I plan on doing the assembly.
 

Chevy1925

don't know sh!t about IFS
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That's exactly the kind of advice I am after. Thank you.

I was kind of at a toss up between the cast and performance cast. Seeing as that is what I broke, it makes sense to upgrade.

For measuring piston protrusion, I was planning on using a dial indicator to reference the block and then measure the piston above the wrist pin. Is this typically how it is done?

I plan on doing the assembly.

yes, then rock it and use the highest measurement. measure both sides of the piston as one side can be higher than the other.

not sure what experience you have with building engines but never assume the machine shop got it all right. double check it all. even the best can miss something, we are all human.
 

Doms

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Honestly it has been a while since I've been in an engine but I think it should go okay. I have some pretty nice measuring tools (do some hobby machining) so I will triple check everything. I really just plan on taking my sweet ass time, being super methodical, taking lots of pictures and probably asking a ton of questions. I have been doing a lot of reading over the last few weeks. There is a ton of good information on this forum.
 

Doms

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If you do not use oe replacement pistons, it will need balanced.

Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk

Thank you for pointing that out. I intend to get everything weight matched as best as I can at home and then hand it over to the machine shop for balancing.
 

LBZ

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If you do not use oe replacement pistons, it will need balanced.

Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk

No matter what pistons you use if you plan to keep the truck awhile you should balance it anyways.

Myself I’d add an lml crank and balancer and an AF cam to the build but neither are super essential.
 

ikeG

Oughta Know Better
Apr 19, 2011
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No matter what pistons you use if you plan to keep the truck awhile you should balance it anyways.

I.E. -If you use a stock lbz crank with stock lbz pistons(stock rods obviously), you do not need to rebalance. That is exactly how it came off the showroom floor.
However, if you did rebalance using all stock parts, there will be room for improvement. Stock duramax engines are off several percent when new.

Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk
 

DAVe3283

Heavy & Slow
Sep 3, 2009
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Did you eat piston chunks with the oil pump? Because they don't really wear out, especially at 80k miles. I'm running my original oil pump on my built motor, up around 340k miles on the oil pump now. No issues at all.

If you took some metal through it (or think you did), then yeah, just replace it. But if the piston simply cracked and didn't shed metal, I'd run the original pump.
 

Doms

New member
Apr 23, 2020
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Did you eat piston chunks with the oil pump? Because they don't really wear out, especially at 80k miles. I'm running my original oil pump on my built motor, up around 340k miles on the oil pump now. No issues at all.

If you took some metal through it (or think you did), then yeah, just replace it. But if the piston simply cracked and didn't shed metal, I'd run the original pump.

No I don’t suspect so. Crack looks pretty clean. One tiny little piece missing. I think the pump is probably fine, it’s more a peace of mind thing. A new pump will only run a few hundred dollars.

4C0EB1E4-7F01-4E63-8269-B1F707EA7675.jpg
 

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Doms

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So I have been slowly plugging away at this. Work and yard work has gotten in the way a little bit. Block is at the machine shop. I had a little bit of scoring on cylinder #1 so he will see how much he needs to take before I order pistons but it shouldn't be much.

I started cleaning some bits and pieces which leads me to a question. Is the front timing cover magnesium? I was under the assumption that it was going to be aluminum but the way that it oxidized with the de-greaser I was using tells me other wise. I can shave a little piece off and take a match to it but I figured someone here probably knows.
 

Doms

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What causes this pattern on the bearing? A lot of the top rod bearings have a similar wear on them. Is it a breakdown from fatigue? Or contamination?
 

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TheBac

Why do I keep doing this?
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IMO, cylinder pressure from higher hp. All mine looked as bad or worse than that....
 

PureHybrid

Isuzu Shakes IT
Feb 15, 2012
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It's lining fatigue from what I can see. Most commonly from overloading a bearing, like Tom said, cyl pressure high in the lower rpm or it's been lugged
 

Doms

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Saskatchewan
I was initially going to go with "p" series bearing but I think I will upgrade to "h" after seeing the bearings that came out.

How do I order these when I have a mix of rods (A and B)? I have not seen this as an option for the "h" series bearings anywhere although I have seen it for the "p".
 

Chevy1925

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Buy stock or P’s. Not worth putting the money into H bearings for your use.

Save the cash to do an LML oil pump instead (requires more than just a pump)
 
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