About the pistons above.
New 70mm vs used 71.25mm.
** The oil stained piston got oil from above, not via oil rings. **
It was a period of oil leaking heads. First one, head with bronze guides with a short life.
Flexy 5mm stems worn the guides from top to bottom.
Next a ported 392 head with K valves, the thinner part of stem for keepers very tall as they are.
Higher lifting cam made the thinner area of stem to pass thru the guide seal making an oil pump, in valve. Guides machined and sunken deeper for ca 11mm lifting cam
Both heads are restored. 392 head now with the 970cc. The 5mm stemmed head got CycleX iron guides and 34/28mm K valves.
I understand..
Does your picture show the 71.25mm pistons ring land oil residue stains washed clean between the the 2nd and 3rd ring, thrust side 90* to pin…? Or is that just the light or flash washing out the stain…?
It’s good to know you don’t contribute the oil consumption with the XA ring pack… I have a set of (old design) 71.25mm wiseco with the same XA ring packages…
However I’m now more concerned about the cylinder head I was planning on running..
It’s a jmr stage 4 sporting kibble whites Oversized k valves, bronze guides, springs, retainers, caps….?…?
Now I see Kenny is promoting 5mm stems after a bulk purchase or buy out of the same valve kits….but I’ve also previously read somewhere that the cast iron guides were the recommended choice along with the standard valve stem size for OEM length lifespans… Indicating the 5mm stem flexed too much with heavy springs in combination with aggressive camshaft profiles..
May need to rethink….
What does PEWE believe caused or contributed to the bronze guide short lifespan…?
Does your 392 cast iron guide head run the same camshaft and springs combination as the bronze guide counterpart..?
How many miles have you logged on your 392 cast iron guide 5mm valves…? (as for a comparison)
Was your 5mm valve stem height adjusted prior to lash cap usage..?
Thanks in advance…
Edit::
Did you by chance dykem the top of a lash cap to see where the adjuster tip’s sweep was, in relation to the valve stem centerline…?
Hi,
Here a photo of the head (300 head) upper part during removal.
Guides bad after around 20.000 street km.
- DP315 cam mostly, not high lift in the reality. 0.368" lift, subtracting the 0.012 lash making it rather tame.
- RC295 profile with 0.395" lift, 0.004" lash.
I guess 75/25 mix of cams.
And lash caps, today in the bags of the leftovers except guides. New guides and ready to be reused.
The lash caps looked OK. No dimples felt by nail.
Valves assembled at my local shop where the spring pressure was measured.
Shim by Kibblewhite recommended pressure. Not much found, only 4 silver colored ca 1mm thick.
Might have been on In or Ex side.
Very light valves need less spring pressure.
That 300 head has now CycleX iron guides and SS valves. They got a temporar batch. Still available, scroll down to SS valves. Only $25US each. (Iron guides for high lift, springs and TI retainers to be added.)
http://www.cyclexchange.net/Engine%20Parts%20Valve%20Trane.htmGood idea to purchase as plan B. Where to find other 34mm K valves?
F2 IN is possible but slightly shorter.
The later 392 head got stock guides, shortened and reshaped when sunken deeper.
33.5/28.5mm Kibblewhite valves.
Photo of piston today. The dirty sides could also have been affected by rich jetted carbs. Too rich needles. Tried to change all other jets. Always way too rich and lean somewhere.
I used the 970cc setup while finding correct carb setup to not torture the billet block too much.
Found correct needles.
The 970cc setup runs too good to be changed, not even adjust the cam.
I must let it run on the same Dyno to see what not rich needles can provide.