The message to which you are about to reply is shown first. GO TO REPLY FORM



 VIEW    REPLY TO THIS MESSAGE    PRINT   SAVE 

Hey, engine builders, I need some guidance. 120-130 1966

In any case, the position of the piston ring will have only a very slight affect on the C, since there really isn't *that* much volume between the pistons and the cylinder walls in the first place. might be in danger of dropping past significant digits in terms of the accuracy of the more directly relevant measurements (such as the combustion chamber volume).

.028" may be a tiny bit closer, you might want to aim at .032. When the motor heats up, the rods stretch. And when the motor is revved up, they stretch a little more. Don't want them to touch the head if you reav it up a little too high.

Zeroing the piston height isn't integral to getting an omtimal quench height, but an accurate measurement of piston deck height is needed before you know what thickness of HG to get. If you are wanting to set it to a fine degree of accuracy, consider a copper HG, you can specify a precise thickness and it won't compress. There are several heights of the standard compressible HG's, but then you have to reverse engineere the deck height to match, which isn't as easy as jsut picking the HG thickness from a wider range of options. Cometic also makes MLS HG's too, AFAIK. Not sure if the ones I've heard about were special order or not.

With good quench, you can run higher CR with lwoer octane gas, however, I'm not enough of a motor building genius to be able to suggest what CR/quench/octane ratings might go together properly. I'm guessing that it might be worthwhile making a motor that can run easily on regular gas these days. My PV needs the premium, $0.20 (at least) more a gallon that you have to pay every single fill up.
--
'63 PV544 rat rod, '93 Classic #1141 245 +t






USERNAME
Use "claim to be" below if you don't want to log in.
PASSWORD
I don't have an account. Sign me up.
CLAIM TO BE
Use only if you don't want to login (post anonymously).
ENTER CAPTCHA CODE
This is required for posting anonymously.
OPTIONS notify by email
Available only to user accounts.
SUBJECT
MODEL/YEAR
MESSAGE

DICTIONARY
LABEL(S) +
IMAGE URL *
[IMAGE LIBRARY (UPLOAD/SELECT)]

* = Field is optional.

+ = Enter space delimited labels for this post. An example entry: 240 muffler


©Jarrod Stenberg 1997-2022. All material except where indicated.


All participants agree to these terms.

Brickboard.com is not affiliated with nor sponsored by AB Volvo, Volvo Car Corporation, Volvo Cars of North America, Inc. or Ford Motor Company. Brickboard.com is a Volvo owner/enthusiast site, similar to a club, and does not intend to pose as an official Volvo site. The official Volvo site can be found here.