I have watched this thread for a bit and would like to completely dispell one idea. Cranking the engine to get oil pressure is not a good idea. Virtually all serious engine wear takes place during starting . That is because the oil is not present in the pressurized state. The cylinder walls are relatively dry and all the oil has dripped off of the camshaft. This is at least twofold worse on a brand new motor as some of the areas have never had oil to them yet. Cranking the engine over on the starter till you have oil pressure is the longest method to get oil to the engine and even then the only oil going anywhere is in the oil galleries provided of course the oil pump is turning fast enough to pick it up. The NO 1 cause of camshaft failure in a new engine as any cam manufacturer will tell you is the engine was cranked for extended periods of time so no oil was sprayed up off of the crankshaft onto the camshaft and lifters and the assembly lube cannot carry the load of lubing the cam that long (long means a minute or so.) If you want to be good to your engine make sure the timing is right on and there is some fuel in the carb and fire and run it immediately. The engine should not be allowed to idle for the first twenty minutes or so. This way it will get oil everywhere within a few seconds and will stay lubed as the cam and lifters get familiar with each other. No damage will result. As an engine builder of some 35 years I would not cover an engine that is starter cranked for oil pressure and neither would any cam manufacturer. Dispite the fact that it seems the right idea because it is complicated and time comsuming it is excactly the worst thing you can to for your engine and more new engines are damaged that way than any other. I am sorry if this offends some of you but it is the absolute truth. If you want to go a step further then preoil you engine before starting either by running the oil pump with a preoiler shaft with the distributor removed or with a pressurized preoiler. What you want is the engine running and spraying oil inside as quickly as is possible. It takes only a few seconds to get oil pressure and internal spraying when the engine is fired up immediately but it takes minutes on the starter. Loads are the same but the time is much longer with the starter cranking deal and there is absolutely no oil spraying on anything inside the engine.BTW it takes less than 5 minutes to completely wipe a camshaft lobe. Don Dulmage Master Mach , Master Tech ASE Lars Larson 56 Plymouth wrote: > > Dave H has presented most the info, also check your shop or motors manual? > There is also an association of national engine rebuilders, my rebuild came > with a detailed breakin procedure and guarantee, maybe U can find one of them > like at a Jasper or other rebuilder. Cant seem to find my copy, but its 7 > yrs old so may have disappeared. > If cranking to build up oil pressure, good to do each spring, dont forget to > remove the LOW VOLTAGE lead from dist to coil- not the high tension wire. > L.
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