Re: C10 Update: Knowledge Learned
All I can say is my head aches now..
Ron, I have nothing but admiration for you, undertaking such a project when it really wasn't something you were already completely familiar with.. That is why I started working on small engines. (Note the word "Small"!). It was not a vocation in my wheel house and I wanted to learn. You, my friend, dove in head first! I like your - 'in for a dime, in for a dollar' attitude.. And wish you all the luck in the world.. I would never had done it.. Needing information was what brought me here in the first place!
Roger
I "rebuilt" a few engines when I was a teenager.
To us back then, rebuilding consisted of reaming the cylinder ridges, honing the walls,installing new rings and slapping it back together with new gaskets.
We did my buddy's engine and didn't remove the carbon from the ring grooves on the pistons..........it was so tight that we couldn't
even tow it to start it...the rear wheels would just lock up when we dumped the clutch!
Then I did one more completely about 15 years ago. A '91 Chev police car engine.
I sold that to a neighbor who loved it, but wrecked it on an interstate while he was towing a trailer.
Anyway, this time I'm trying to do it right.
I looked last night and the equivalent GM crate motor would have set me back about $8 grand, tiho
I could spend less,............. and get less.
I (hopefully) will not come close to that number with mine.
There are still many things that confound me.
Having looked at the crate motor specs, there is NO way the quench can be optimum given the motor data and C/R.
So, maybe I am making much ado about nothing??
I HAVE always had the tendency to get caught up in specifications. Comes from my many years in mechanical purchasing.
At least I have left enough meat on the block so that I CAN put thicker head gaskets on to lower the C/R should mine prove to be too difficult.
This IS experience I am gaining, and that is priceless....