I have been using synthetic oil in every engine I’ve put together since early 80s weather just a re ring job or a full on built engine. I never had a problem with the rings not wanting to seat. Kim
Puzackly.
I have been using synthetic oil in every engine I’ve put together since early 80s weather just a re ring job or a full on built engine. I never had a problem with the rings not wanting to seat. Kim
I'm sure you would work hard to make him satisfied but would you give him money a year or more later after the motors been apart?The length of time that past would have me also not wanting to make anything good. That said, if I told someone I would stand behind, I would. I would work hard to come to some kind of an agreement that wouldn't be too hard on either of us. I believe that would be fair.
if he would have fired it off a year later and drove it over since he was close by you would have been all over it just like I would have but seriously cash a year later after it's been disassembledI'm sure you would work hard to make him satisfied but would you give him money a year or more later after the motors been apart?
Pivoting from 340 to 360
Did anyone read his first thread...…………..
So, the '72 340 I bought for my '73 Satellite was torn down and found to have significant scoring in the bores due to it sitting around for years. Condensation took that puppy down.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^1st I'll say I always tell buyers NOT to buy a crate engine or if it's used it must be at least partially disassembled for inspection.Now,,,,even if every cylinder were not looked at,rust and pitting would have been evident.So,,,,,IMO this rust occurred after the purchase.
I am surprised the buyer did not even "go through" the used engine before installation!
Rick has been around this hobby a long time and so have I
Have NEVER heard a bad word about Rick and was surprised to read the beginning of this thread.
I'm sure you would work hard to make him satisfied but would you give him money a year or more later after the motors been apart?
My customer and I just took his Trans Am back to Portland engine rebuilders last month. They have built his motor well over a year ago and we just got fired up a couple months ago. Everything went fine with the break in and a small drive. and then he called me a few days later and said I had started it and he thought he heard some kind of a knock? True enough I can hear it as well and told him to turn it off quickly. Let's call Ted at Portland engine rebuilders and see what he says. We trailer the car out there and sure enough it was just a rocker hitting the custom valve covers my customer wanted. the first thing we did was take it straight back to the Builder who is more than happy to give a look. I know for a fact that if we would had any problem seriously down low we may have been in for taking the motor back out but I'm sure Ted would have fixed it and made it right no problem. The years time till we started it didn't faze the Builder one bit. And the fact that we brought it right to him when we thought we had a problem... He was very thankful of that. And we were very thankful for him asking us to quickly bring it out so he could help us. And he did. We took the valve covers off and banged in the baffle a little bit and problem solved. I know it was a simple problem but before we got crazy doing our own diagnosis I don't want to the person responsible for building a motor to have the first crack at it.You're probably right. That's a lot of time to pass. Really no telling what happened in that time frame.
A fresh machined cylinder bore can rust in DAYS....
Posting this on every Mopar board does not make the OP right.
FACT: You bought an engine that had been built long ago by someone else.
FACT: You obviously do not have the tools or skill to build an engine yourself so you had to rely on someone else to assess the quality of the build.
FACT: Rick admitted that he did not build the engine.
FACT: You did a poor job of inspecting a used engine.
FACT: The engine sat for years but you decided to paint it and run it anyway.
FACT: New engines get by with synthetic oil because they run tighter clearances for the piston, have thinner rings and have tighter ring gaps. Older style engines and synthetic oil is a crapshoot as to how well the rings will seat.
FACT: People that do not understand something often feel that they were "cheated" when something goes wrong.
FACT: Unless you saw the engine run, you do not know exactly how well it will run, no matter WHO built it.
This is a sad attempt on your part to cover your own mistake. YOU should have done a better job inspecting the engine.
Yes you are right to a point, but if Rick said it's good and he guarantees it, than that is it, there is no argument. Rick should back up his word.
did we confirm that he guaranteed it or are we just confirming that the o p said he did?Its does not matter Rick guarantied it, that was good. That rust was there for years!!! For that much money Rick should have pulled the heads and double checked everything to back up his guaranty. Rick took a gamble that its was still good and It was not. Bottom line! He should have offer to do something.