Dartswinger70
Well-Known Member
"...welll, what would Uncle Tony do..." - he'd pull the piston fill the crack with Harbor freight flux core weld then file it close and let the piston ring "finish hone" the repair...
That's good advice. I might do just that. I will see what my shop tells me when they scope it.Your doing the right thing. Those mid 80s 318 blocks are crap anyway. Almost every one I have looked at are cracked on the deck surface to those open head bolt holes. They are THIN. Sell off those cheap rebuilder .060 pistons and bore the replacement block the min required to clean up.
It depends on how nice the customer is.Won’t matter if he calls them or sues them. The laws on this were settled long ago.
The warranty is what it is and it’s in writing. Implied Consent law covers this too.
Obviously if he calls them and explains to them the circumstances they MIGHT, MAYBE, COULD help him out.
But I doubt it and it is worth a try.
I’ve questioned these warranties and called the lawyer that wrote out the warranty where I worked at the time and he told all of us the warranty was iron clad.
We got sued twice while I was there. Didn’t lose either.
It depends on how nice the customer is.
I think calling is worth a try. The companies do not have to legally do anything, but sometimes they might help just a little bit.
I too doubt it, but sometimes we gotta roll the dice.
Fair enough.I am not saying you are wrong. I am saying, I don't want to play this game twice. And I am not a big fan of fool me twice. I really do appreciate your advice and perspective. The story is a lot longer with the entire project than I will bother you with.
I have a block from a running engine, and am already on my way down that path.
Sleeving the engine is just as much work as a new block and similar cost. To sleeve the engine, I have to tear it down to completely bare. The shop will not touch it otherwise. The shop will have to sleeve it, bore it, hone it, check adjacent cylinders, redeck the block. I already talked to the shop about it, and they said I am looking at minimal cost difference.
That's good advice. I might do just that. I will see what my shop tells me when they scope it.
Imagine you are them, a business out to make a profit . They honor the warranty till 2021 its 2024. Yes the engine sat for 3 years and they wouldn't say you are lying but, they don't know if you are telling the truth. Maybe the engine sat with water in the water jackets and it froze etc. They just don't know. Maybe they'll be nice and rectify it but ,they don't have to... at that point they would be "being nice" Being nice cuts into profits if a business does it every time they honor a warranty that has expired. Its another point of view. A 318 LA block is attainable , disassemble the innards and have the machine shop machine in the piston to bore clearance and reassemble.I tried calling once and never got through. Problem is, they are 1K miles from me. Shipping alone is $200 one way for a short block. And when I say this is out of warranty, it sat for over 3 years wrapped in the shipping crate. Warranty expired in 2021. 100% my fault, but it is what it is.
Imagine you are them, a business out to make a profit . They honor the warranty till 2021 its 2024. Yes the engine sat for 3 years and they wouldn't say you are lying but, they don't know if you are telling the truth. Maybe the engine sat with water in the water jackets and it froze etc. They just don't know. Maybe they'll be nice and rectify it but ,they don't have to... at that point they would be "being nice" Being nice cuts into profits if a business does it every time they honor a warranty that has expired. Its another point of view. A 318 LA block is attainable , disassemble the innards and have the machine shop machine in the piston to bore clearance and reassemble.
WTF?? Ok what are they charging for the install and the sleeve?
It should be 225 or less. No way can you machine a block for 225 bucks.
I’ve set literally hundreds if not into the thousands of sleeves. I had to set sleeves in a TA block. All eight. When I quit racing I sold that block because I had two X blocks. I sold it to a guy doing a 70 TA clone.
A sleeve is the simplest, cheapest fix. If you have a machinist who isn’t comfortable sleeving a block find a new one.
If he can’t bore a hole to size he’s not a machinist. He’s a poser.
I have a similar story. I had bought a clutch pressure plate and installed it in my car years before I ever took it down the road. I got my car running and had a bad vibration sitting still revving it up to about 2500-3000. I went trhough a process of elimination even fell for the "its the engine it isnt balanced " BS pulled the 340 installed a 318...still there, balanced the flywheel on a tire machine that heavy chunk of metal spun 0. it ended up being the pressure plate. I spent some money figuring that out but it was the same :"gee i bought that 5 years ago I cant take it back saying its a bad part" even though it was...Exactly. I already have another block torn down and ready to machine.
My shop will machine the entire block for a little over $500 and that includes some of the new bearings I will need. To sleeve one cylinder is less than $200. But they cannot just sleeve it and walk away. They have to check adjacent cylinders for distortion, and they have to redeck the block after it is sleeved. Probably will come out closer to $300 when finished. And I don't know that I should trust the block.
I am over $7K into this engine bay already. Not going to shortcut it for a couple hundred bucks.
There is absolutely no point in sleeving an LA 318 block. They are still plentiful... they made millions of them. People on here give them away free from time to time.Like I said, I agree with a new block. Your block wasn’t a good block to start with.
To that end, if that shop can’t set a sleeve without moving other bores around find a new shop.
A sleeve is so simple that to make a big deal out of it it’s nuts.
Stop coupon clipping and find a real shop with with actual machinist.
Like I said, I agree with a new block. Your block wasn’t a good block to start with.
To that end, if that shop can’t set a sleeve without moving other bores around find a new shop.
A sleeve is so simple that to make a big deal out of it it’s nuts.
Stop coupon clipping and find a real shop with with actual machinist.
There is absolutely no point in sleeving an LA 318 block. They are still plentiful... they made millions of them. People on here give them away free from time to time.