Yes plenty to do outside! Gotta keep these kids off all this technology! LolMuch better than anywhere on the west side...just like here in Washington. You are close to skiing, hiking, dirt bike riding...about anything you want to do outside.
Yes plenty to do outside! Gotta keep these kids off all this technology! LolMuch better than anywhere on the west side...just like here in Washington. You are close to skiing, hiking, dirt bike riding...about anything you want to do outside.
Looking great! Those pistons are frik’n sexy!!
So what did you gap the new rings to?
I think that’ll be safe on gasoline with some kind of charge cooling. Just don’t let it spike back up to 22.5 pounds again.ended up going .028 and .030 can’t imagine it going further than 18psi sometime down the road.
I think that’ll be safe on gasoline with some kind of charge cooling. Just don’t let it spike back up to 22.5 pounds again.
I know but I want to make sure I do it right this time. The 100 miles I got out of the last motor was fun but expensive. Lmao.That 3 pound spring would last all of 1 day in my junk. I think currently the lightest spring I have for my truck is 10 pounds. Boost is so addictive.
I can almost guarantee that didn’t happen because of the heat range of your plugs. Sure a colder plug provides a “little” bit of a margin of safety with regards to detonation but if you destroyed a piston and popped a head gasket, the tune was too aggressive or you didn’t have enough ring gap, or enough octane, or all of the above. At that point a colder plug is not likely to save the engine.Hope your running a Cold Spark plug like a NGK 5671-9....
I popped a headgasket and piston on my 360 real quick because I forgot to swap in Colder plugs before the first test drive.
I can almost guarantee that didn’t happen because of the heat range of your plugs. Sure a colder plug provides a “little” bit of a margin of safety with regards to detonation but if you destroyed a piston and popped a head gasket, the tune was too aggressive or you didn’t have enough ring gap, or enough octane, or all of the above. At that point a colder plug is not likely to save the engine.
Not doubting you, please tell me about the setup that died and how you determined the plugs were the root cause.Well, I found the NGK GR5s to be the root cause of it.......
I swapped the entire turbo setup onto a 318 and installed NGK 5671-9 plugs gapped at .028" in it and had no further issues, even up as high as 14psi on pump gas.
Which Kevco pan do you need to send down the road?