twayne24365
Well-Known Member
So ive always hear to have a mopar bored and honed with a torque plate, i just wanted to hear some opinions since i will be taking my block to the shop in another week. This is a 440 btw
To do it right it should be done with a plate....and it's not just a Mopar thing
Not during boring. Only during honing.
Some shops advertise torque plate bore and hone. Maybe just a purist but I'd be all for it if they can do it.Why not during boring? I would think that you would also want it when you bore, to keep the cut straight.
When you tighten the torque plate, it distorts the block, and you want that when boring as honing is not meant to remove any metal as much as just to "scuff the surface"....
If the block distorts when the torque plates are secured it may need to take off more metal than the hone is designed to do....
The distortion is around a couple thousanths in the areas around the bolts. The boring gets it within a few thousanths of final bore size so you can do it with the plate. But it's just more work to bore with the plate, take it apart, wash the block, then reassemble and hone it. That's assuming the shop has two plates otherwise it's a lot more work - remember it has to be correctly torqued each time it goes on. Honing is what brings the bore slowly up to the final size. Honing needs to be done with that distortion occurring. Boring simply doesn't.
Understood. How long ago was that? Did they own a good profilometer?
I've built engines that were plate honed, but when measured the bores were straight and round all the way up to the deck without the heads in place. There should be a measureable distortion without the heads if it's done properly.
We had plenty of gauges. Our line ran 500,000 engines per year for daily drivers. We also had a CMM (Coordinate Measuring Machine) room in our inspection department that we also could get things measured on.
Each pass on the bore took off less and less metal. Our rule was that you use the boring operations to get you to the proper size, then "scratch the surface" with the hone. You just take a little bit off with the hone, but it's mostly to get the surface finish to spec.
When they changed over to the "smooth bore", I was the one who had to have everything measured and submit all results to the design group for their approval before launch. (mid-year launch at that - not a clean break between model years :banghead. Diameter and surface finish at 10 levels of the bore every 45° in each cylinder. :violent1: