Which rods should I use with Diamond pistons and what is the current pricing on any recomendations? I don't want to have to modify the crankshaft.
blackviper said:I guess I'm kinda of lost with the last technical explanation. My goal is to be near 1000 HP. I really don't foresee going any further.
blackviper said:These pistons were purchased from Roe Racing. I'd like to find a set of rods and main caps that work with them or at least rods. What supporting vendor sells the rods recommended?
TNVIPER said:FYI...check your pistons and pins....I bought the Diamonds from Roe and they were not the correct parts. The label on the box was correct but the pistons were too big and the pins were .5" short.....had these been installed in my truck the pistons would have hit the heads...not good..:bawling: ..luckly we have a very competent machine shop here and they caught the mistake.........BTW...this was not Roe's fault...Diamond packaged the wrong parts....Roe immediately had them picked up and refunded my money...![]()
Stinker said:Now to build a good decent priced strong 1000hp engine cost $.You will need a set of crower or oliver rods, with the crank ground to a chevy journal so you can use stronger studs, and your only talkin a couple thousands off the crank its no big deal. Have the crank balanced and checked for trueness,(this is the heart of the engine, remember this)
Have billet main caps installed, and if money provides a stud girdle. Get a decent cam. this should give you a decent strong bottom end.
SrtBrad said:I'm new to the Viper Engine specs for performance applications and have been doing a lot of homework over the last month or so. I was repeatedly told not to grind the crank due to smaller journal sizes that effects oil flow in a negative way.
I am still learning and want to understand your suggestion. I understand that by grinding the crank to chevy specs you can put in a stronger stud. How much oil pressure/volume will be lost and is it enough to worry about in a 1000+ HP application? In addition to balancing the crank should the crank be hardened again (I forgot what that proceedure was called)?
Stinker said:And maybe I should restate one thing, most engine builders may take offense to what I said aobut 1000hp engines not living the life.
but I have seen many pics fo bearings from 1000hp engines and all had severe bearing wear, its jsut the nature of the beast, it may still run, but jsut plan on having the bearings checked at certain points
Stinker said:OK guys this I will lay out in terms that even I can understand![]()
You want a strong motor capable of making good hp in the 800rwhp range then upgrade to JE or Wiesco pistons and a set of eagle rods or whatever your budget is capable of.
but you must have the crank at least checked to make sure it is true, you honestly in my opinion would be a outright dumbass not to do thisthat comes from the heart.
get a set of stocker heads port and polish them and get a decent set of rockers and push rods, have a reputable builder that is VERY GOOD at viper engines, NO FREAKING SHMO THAT DOES SMALL BLOCK CHEVY'S OR FORDS!!
For goodness sake this engine reacts totally different than most normal engines and what applies to a small block DOES NOT APPLY TO OUR MOTORS!!!
I would pay someone twice as much as normal to put it together than have to worry aobut it being put together wrong and have problems down the road![]()
whew! nowthat will give you a good strong motor, capable of short 1000 hp burst, notice I said SHORT!!!
Now on to the good stuff![]()
Stinker said:NOBODY can make a liveable 1000hp engine! fukin period! If anyone says they do they are flat out full of poo, making that kind of hp beats the living hell out of the mains and rod bearings. So if you want to be at that level constantly, expect to rebuild it every 20,000 miles or possibly less.
I dont give a sh#t what anybuilder says.
Stinker said:Now to build a good decent priced strong 1000hp engine cost $.
You will need a set of crower or oliver rods, with the crank ground to a chevy journal so you can use stronger studs, and your only talkin a couple thousands off the crank its no big deal. Have the crank balanced and checked for trueness,(this is the heart of the engine, remember this)
Have billet main caps installed, and if money provides a stud girdle. Get a decent cam. this should give you a decent strong bottom end.
Stinker said:But also remember the engine will only perform and live as good as your builder is, if not , it could take a :toilet:
Bite the bullet , go with strykers, or someone who has ported viper heads before, jessel or crower rockers, and have the intake honed. and get a set of head studs.
you should be good to go, but if this cost any less than 10-12k then find another builder, to have one done right, it cost.
Thats why mine runs on low boost, and will be rebuilt soon![]()
I cant say this enough guys, dont cheap out and try to get the best deal, it will cost you more in the long run, much more than if you do it right the first time.
Personally you need to listen to FstJack, he has put together more engines than most of us can count, he does get a touch extremebut he want lead ya wrong:rock:
stinker said:And before you start thinking , there are only a handful of viper engine builders out there that are reputable, Exotic engines, UGR, heffner in fla.
And Blaine and I think he is in TX.
Now that covers the west coast, the east , fla, and tx, there is a builder up north, but he takes ten years to put things together.
Wifey said:That is because the engine needs to be clearanced to let the internal parts move around as things flex under heavy loads.![]()
Example, usually the crank is ground and polished about .0001 under size ( IE, a .010 would be .011 not recomended, use a full dimentioned crank less the .0001) and the rods would have the about .010 removed each side, and the wrist pins would be modified to full floating type allowing everything to move around without binding.:rock:
The extra clearance will need more oil volume from the pump to fill the extra space so to speak ( hi pressure will erode the bearings though) A clearanced engine will require bearing replacement every 5-15,000 miles depending on use( all out racing , sooner)![]()
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