Folks
I agree with John and Danny that the acumen and experience of the machinist and machine shop rebuilding your engine is paramount and, alas, a seemingly dying art, when “slap-dash” rebuilds or (more likely) crate engines are the norm these days
To wit: I bought George Riehl’s “Killer K” engine as you may recall (from a previous club newsletter) to put into my 4 speed K several years ago. I bought it thinking that all the things George had said he did to that engine in an early 2000’s article he had written for the club newsletter were actually done (.030 over, 1.74 exhaust valves, balancing, etc.) Upon sending the engine to club member Dominick Rinaldi here in Maine for a quick inspection as I thought I’d be able to install it “as is” with a few new pieces (primarily a new oil pan and the addition of short cross rams), it turned out that George’s description of the work that was done was untrue and a fabrication, sadly and disappointingly for me as a club member (and also for my wallet.)
Thankfully, Dominick has used his expertise and Mopar acumen to build that engine into what will be a fitting replacement for the original 413/360 that’s currently in the car with the complete short Ram setup, an actual .030 overbore w/ new pistons and rods , cc’d 906 heads (from member Don Petty) now with 2.11/1.81 stainless valves, Comp Cam, full indexing and dial-in, etc etc . Dominick’s expertise and knowledge of how to go through our engines (and transmissions etc) during a refresh or rebuild is something to be thankful for. As you longer term club members can probably appreciate, It is painful for me to share this experience (on several levels) but on the plus side, I need to express Major Kudos to the Rinaldi’s - we’re lucky to have them in the club.
Keith On Sep 4, 2022, at 8:48 PM, dplotkin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
I'll second that. A good running engine should never be taken apart unless it is worn out or broken. By worn out I mean fouled plugs, oil consumption, visible smoke, lack of power.
If engine condition is keeping you up at night send a sample to an oil analysis firm. The report will tell you exactly what is and is not in the oil together with concentrations thereof. It will show what metals, how much fuel, antifreeze just about everything a blood test reveals about us. Many of my friends use these services.
As John said you are at the mercy and subject to the acumen of the machinist. Given the dearth of skilled workers older machinists who have seen a Chrysler V8 from our period are few and far between. Besides, your test was invalid based on your description.
Danny Plotkin
-----Original Message----- From: "mgoodknight@xxxxxxxx" <mgoodknight@xxxxxxxx> Sent: Sunday, September 4, 2022 10:58am To: jkg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Cc: nicksgaragesd@xxxxxxxxx, allynentertainment@xxxxxxxxx, chrysler-300-club-international@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: {Chrysler 300} Compression Test - 413
Pay very close attention to John Grady's recommendations and his analytics involving supposed need for engine rebuild based on the results of a compression test. He's RIGHT ON!!! All too often the results a grossly flawed, not only because of errors in procedure, but also because of errors in knowledge of how to interpret the readings. Important clues regarding condition of engine are numerous: rate of oil consumption, smoothness of engine at idle and especially loaded at slow rpm, noise from valves, noises from crankshaft bearings (rods and/or mains, oil leaks can be a clue, but not usually indicating mechanical trouble, difficulty in obtaining consistent/satisfactory ignition timing (suggests timing chain wear likely). Listen to the engine's exhaust-----all 8 cylinders should sound nearly the same. Leaky exhaust valve will likely make an audible WHOOSH sound each time that cylinder has compression/combustion, intake valve leakage is uncommon and not easy to detect by sound. Loose pistons (worn cylinders) might give an audible light thump as slow idle when cold, but likely will go away as warm-up occurs. Aircraft engines usually have quite audible piston noise for a few minutes after start-up (air cooled engines generally have very loose fit pistons compared with liquid cooled engines.
Please note: message attached
From: John Grady <jkg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: Nick Taylor <nicksgaragesd@xxxxxxxxx> Cc: Matt Allyn <allynentertainment@xxxxxxxxx>, Chrysler 300 Club International <chrysler-300-club-international@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: Re: {Chrysler 300} Compression Test - 413 Date: Sun, 4 Sep 2022 09:20:42 -0400
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