eddie102870 said:sound like an elite club to be in, i believe ill pass...lol
What no guts? What is life without a little risk taking?
eddie102870 said:sound like an elite club to be in, i believe ill pass...lol
Ram From Hell said:One might think I'd be somehow vindicated about pistons breaking on other FI systems due to my prior association with STS. Nothing could be farther from the truth (except perhaps if I said I had an extra large schlong).
I think the most credible investigative work done to date was done by Roe. He installed 10 O2 sensors on a test engine and found the engine going lean up front (#2 & #3 specifically) by more than a point. While a point may not inandofitself be a drastic issue, consider what those lean cylinders mean when tuning on the AVERAGE AFR for the engine (or each bank of cylinders). Then it can become a big issue. Under boost, this difference on those cylinders is not going to increase on a linear scale either. I believe that those that have had failures due to pistons breaking or burning have this to blame.
I also believe that the Roe SC is the best possible choice for FI based on this research. He refuses to make a side mount with his compressor as he will not boost the stock intake manifold, believing that it is a design flaw with the intake that is to blame for the errant lean-out problems. Notice that the GenIV engine has gone back to twin TB's and plenums like the GENI and GENII instakes! This must be a known issue!
There are of course other issues that have lead to engine failures (rod oiling, as mentioned above), but I'm betting if this is a blown piston issue, the stock intake may be to blame. While it's easy to say "it is all in the tune", if the tuner is not monitoring all 10 cylinders and adjusting the AFR for each when tuning, he can't compensate for the lean cylinders other than by making the whole tune pig rich. But of course in doing so, leaves tons of fuel on the table just because of a couple of lean cylinders.
Gentlemen, IMHO, we need an aftermarket intake manifold! Maybe someone can talk Roe into adapting his supercharger base for NA so it can be used for that or FI!:rock:
Silverback said:If I remember right, didn't Phil (BigAsp) also spin the #3 rod bearings both times his blew? I think that is the same time that Hennessey chimed in about the oiling problem.
very interesting..........Ram From Hell said:One might think I'd be somehow vindicated about pistons breaking on other FI systems due to my prior association with STS. Nothing could be farther from the truth (except perhaps if I said I had an extra large schlong).
I think the most credible investigative work done to date was done by Roe. He installed 10 O2 sensors on a test engine and found the engine going lean up front (#2 & #3 specifically) by more than a point. While a point may not inandofitself be a drastic issue, consider what those lean cylinders mean when tuning on the AVERAGE AFR for the engine (or each bank of cylinders). Then it can become a big issue. Under boost, this difference on those cylinders is not going to increase on a linear scale either. I believe that those that have had failures due to pistons breaking or burning have this to blame.
I also believe that the Roe SC is the best possible choice for FI based on this research. He refuses to make a side mount with his compressor as he will not boost the stock intake manifold, believing that it is a design flaw with the intake that is to blame for the errant lean-out problems. Notice that the GenIV engine has gone back to twin TB's and plenums like the GENI and GENII instakes! This must be a known issue!
There are of course other issues that have lead to engine failures (rod oiling, as mentioned above), but I'm betting if this is a blown piston issue, the stock intake may be to blame. While it's easy to say "it is all in the tune", if the tuner is not monitoring all 10 cylinders and adjusting the AFR for each when tuning, he can't compensate for the lean cylinders other than by making the whole tune pig rich. But of course in doing so, leaves tons of fuel on the table just because of a couple of lean cylinders.
Gentlemen, IMHO, we need an aftermarket intake manifold! Maybe someone can talk Roe into adapting his supercharger base for NA so it can be used for that or FI!:rock:
Scrambler1 said:Yup, pretty much what I'm going to do. Not sure about sleeving yet what kind of $$ is that if you don't mind me asking? We'll see how bad it is inside once its all apart. Not doing strikers, just work on my stock heads. This is money I wasn't looking to spend anyway so if I'm going to spend another 3gs, I'll talk to Stinker about a new rear end so I can run 15's.
Still undecided on builder for motor. Arrow will bench dyno it but I have to ship it to them. Proline is not far from home so I can deliver, think they build the motors for Underground??? They come highly reccomended. Have to decide pretty soon though.
I had over 15,000 miles on my Paxton so considering stock internals and how hard I ran it, not too bad. Chock it up to bad luck. Goal is a reliable streetable motor. Will ad nitrous to get it where I want for the track.
Joe