02-28-2007, 09:31 PM
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#4
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NO Democracy!
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Nun-yah, Maine
1/4: 0.000
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You really don't need the floating pin setup anyways. I think it's better, but we have a contract at work for the PASS and ACT tour and they use sealed crate engines (only we can work on them) and they are ZZ4 Chevy SB's that use pressed pin setups.
All the high dollar setups use floating pins... but i doubt you'd see any difference.
Besides possibly weakening the small end (which I doubt) the biggest concern is rod alignment. You MUST use a proper setup when boring and honing the rod's small end. If the bushing is not dead nuts to the rod's big end, you will have severe piston scuffing, rod sideloading, and worse...rod bearing failure. It doesn't take much to make the piston cocked in the bore. Your pin clearance is probably about .0007" to the rod and .0005" in the piston. You have a few thousandths in rod bearing oil clearance to help pick up some slack... but if you're basically just .001" out of square to the rod's housing bore, then you are more than likely .003 across the pin. This is magnified even more by the piston being cocked which you want running up and down square to the bore for better sealing (and wear) not to mention the rod bearing displacing the load evenly on a square rod journal.
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