You need a press.
Here's a set that recently acquired from a guy that "did it at home". A complete set of ruined pistons, pins and rods. Not to mention the scuffing on the cylinder walls from the pistons in-ability to articulate on the rod.
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....and as UT says at the start of the video.....best left to a machine shop.
Using a press risks the pin 'picking up' [ gauling ] as it gets pressed through the rod. The piston will then destroy itself in the engine in short order.......
My question is why would you want to do it at home? To save money? On an engine build? Most shops will press a set of eight for under 100 bucks. Seriously?
Some things need to be handled by those with the training and experience to do so. Do you know what a good, complete set of wristpin press tools cost? That's the only proper way to do it without the chance of something broken and ruined. It's not worth trying to back yard it trying to save a dime against a hundred.Really, what's the point in working on stuff at all if we can just pay other people to do it for us. Seriously?
Post up pictures of your machine equipment. We'd love to see it. I'm a big fan.I guess to be clearer would be if I asked just what it is that a machine shop is doing that cannot be done at home?
I do machine work at home, I have lathes and a Bridgeport, there's no magic done in machine shops, it's simply careful and precision work.
The UTG vid does mention a forge for heating up the small end of the rod, but as he displays, that's nothing really special.
Thanks for the input everyone!
OUCH!!!!!!!Here's a wrist pin bushing press set. That's Amazon's "discount" price. That doesn't even include the wrist pin press itself.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B008CP6EEQ/?tag=fabo03-20
You'd know it if you did. It's really not difficult, but you really should let the shop do it. My friend Richie says it's REALLY important to only heat the rod to 500 degrees and no more. That's what his forge is set for. It's an important enough step to get right.We pressed the factory pins off pistons on my 74 HP 440, with the HD rods.... hope I didn't jack anything up!
We didn't heat em at all, a Lil oil... not reusing the stock pistons. Ever. They're smelted by now probably.... was a prepped block. Rats got into the building, ate the bag, and built a nest in the lifter valley.... was hot tanked, w/ a new 030 bore, new cam bearings...a Lil round wire brush ( on the battery) in the lifter bores cleaned em up really good, may have to get a silicone dingle hone. definitely need to CLEAN THE HECK outta the rest of it. I'm kinda pissed about it. That what happens when you let em sit for 15 years.You'd know it if you did. It's really not difficult, but you really should let the shop do it. My friend Richie says it's REALLY important to only heat the rod to 500 degrees and no more. That's what his forge is set for. It's an important enough step to get right.