Re: [Chrysler300] Motor
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Re: [Chrysler300] Motor



My opinion:
I would think twice about boring a motor more than .060" over. Most standard pistons are only offered .030" to .060" over.
When I had my 392 short block rebuilt by Dick Landy's shop it had already been bored to .060" over. They would not bore it and honed it to .065" over and made custom pistons for .065" over.
As far as using torque plates. They are used when power honing not boring. I asked if they were going to use torque plates when honing my engine. They told me for a street application your wasting your money. Torque plates will give you as near perfect ring seal as you will get, but only needed in a race application when you must have the most power the engine will put out. At Landy's prices I am sure they would have been glade to put it on my invoice if they thought it should have been done.
A good power hone cross hatch with molly rings will do a fine job for any street motor.
Always use a good reputable machine shop with known qualified personnel. Boring, honing, decking, surfacing, align honing, rod rebuilding and balancing are all very precision operations. Most tolerances are held to 1/2 of one thousandths of an inch. A slam bang re builder will produce a lower performing motor with a shortened life.


Gary, The Parts Doc





At 10:38 AM 5/23/02, Ryan Hill wrote:
With regards to the machining of the block, you should be able to take that
block to at least 70 or 80 thousands overbore but I'm not sure what you will
require? In any case it is good practice to use a torque plate when doing
the boring.....especially when you are reducing the wall thickness
dramatically. Also, when assembling the short-block be sure and use a rope
seal around the rear crank journal(rear seal). They last much longer than
the cheap seals provided in most gasket kits.

As for the heads, if you have access to a die grinder you can port match the
intake to the head very easily and improve the flow quite a bit. Here's a
trick:

When you remove the intake from the head, remove the valley pan and clean
off the pan and the head mating surfaces. Lay the valley pan back in place
and bolt it down if needed to center it. Inside the openings on the pan you
will likely see quite a bit of head material that doesn't match the port
pattern of the gasket.......spray some grey primer,white paint, etc. at the
gasket on all the ports. When you remove the gasket you will have a perfect
pattern painted around each port. With a die grinder, remove the material
that is painted to give you a perfect "port match". Be carefull to grind at
a 90 degree(+/-) angle from the machined surface and don't damage the mating
surface.

In addition to removing the excess material from the lip of the port you
should also smooth out any slag or burrs inside the runner that may cause
extreme turbulence. Do not smooth out the runners too much as there should
be some roughness to the runners to properly mix the Air/Fuel as it heads to
the cylinders.

Repeat the process with the same gasket to the intake manifold and you will
improve the flow and equalize the volumes being delivered to the combustion
chambers. This can also be done with the exhaust side. There are some power
gains to be had here but at the very least the engine will run smoother.

If the engine has been machined before, check the deck height and be
carefull about removing any more material from the block or head. You could
end up increasing your compression ratio, having a problem mating the intake
to the head, and in extreme cases cause rocker arm failure(even with
hydraulic lifters). This problem can easily be solved with thicker head
gaskets but it's always better to know before you assemble the engine.

Remember also that with any cam change and flow changes that your carb
should be adjusted or modified to allow for the new demands.

Hope this helps. Ryan


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