yepMy first thought is why didn't the machine shop catch this.........and the second thought is you better get it repaired while the engines out and apart. I definetely wouldn't chance it at this point.
I'd take it back. Hopefully they can repair it, but I'd want to hear a pretty good story about how they're going to do it.
73AbodEE said:how could any competent machine shop miss that ???????? or did they ?
things that make you go Hmmmmmm.......
X2 ....... Sketchy at best.
I'd go have a nice chat with them, don't forget to have a short chrome chain wrapped around your right or left fist while chatting with them. Just a suggestion, not telling you to do the latter lol ;-)
73AbodEE said:LOL some shops need a little convincing
mullinax95 said:If the machine shop didn't catch that they need to shut the doors. Unless they just need the money and letting everything come in they work on it.
There's worse. Years ago a buddy of mine wanted to do a "simple" rebuild on a Chivvy 250 for a Chivy II. He gave the machine shop the block and told them:
Do whatever you need to to clean the block
Do whatever you need to to make this ready for rings. If it needs bored, bore it. If it needs the deck milled, do that
He gets it back:
They hot tanked it complete with oil gallery and core plugs in place
milled the deck including MILLING OFF the dowel pins and HONED THE cylinders
I did not say "ridge reamed" and THEN honed, I mean HONED period. The ridge was still there, complete with I - don't - know - how much taper.
This was a long time shop in San Diego, for all I know they are still doing..........uh........"business"
There's worse. Years ago a buddy of mine wanted to do a "simple" rebuild on a Chivvy 250 for a Chivy II. He gave the machine shop the block and told them:
Do whatever you need to to clean the block
Do whatever you need to to make this ready for rings. If it needs bored, bore it. If it needs the deck milled, do that
He gets it back:
They hot tanked it complete with oil gallery and core plugs in place
milled the deck including MILLING OFF the dowel pins and HONED THE cylinders
I did not say "ridge reamed" and THEN honed, I mean HONED period. The ridge was still there, complete with I - don't - know - how much taper.
This was a long time shop in San Diego, for all I know they are still doing..........uh........"business"
There is, if it's a registered ASE shop, if you pay them for work and they don't do it, don't do it right or screw something else up it's completely on them, if they don't fix it at there cost then they get into some big trouble.
If you supplied the block and did not request magnuflux and pressure testing, then its not their fault. If you did request magnaflux and pressure testing then its their fault. If they supplied the core its their fault. There is no good way to fix this. I had a guy with a sb chev the other day with the same problem. You basically need to replace the block. When some one brings in a block and says bore and hone this, then its assumed you know your block is OK. This may not be what you want to hear, but is the reality of these situations. Hopefully your shop will sympathize and make it as right as they can what ever the case maybe.See crack between #4 and #6 cylinder.Bottom head bolt hole.Putting heads on new short block.Your input.Please,Thanks Kevin.
The shop I use would have called and told me forget this block there are cracks in it . Of course they inspect everything a customer brings in before the work is done , save lots o headaches . **** does get by sometimes , but the crack above looks pretty easy to spot .If you supplied the block and did not request magnuflux and pressure testing, then its not their fault. If you did request magnaflux and pressure testing then its their fault. If they supplied the core its their fault. There is no good way to fix this. I had a guy with a sb chev the other day with the same problem. You basically need to replace the block. When some one brings in a block and says bore and hone this, then its assumed you know your block is OK. This may not be what you want to hear, but is the reality of these situations. Hopefully your shop will sympathize and make it as right as they can what ever the case maybe.
Is it an American thing,or is that standard available in Canada?
If you supplied the block and did not request magnuflux and pressure testing, then its not their fault.
When some one brings in a block and says bore and hone this, then its assumed you know your block is OK. This may not be what you want to hear, but is the reality of these situations. Hopefully your shop will sympathize and make it as right as they can what ever the case maybe.
The crack is VISIBLE. No need to magnaflux. Its obvious even in the blurry picture posted.
This is totally bogus. The customer is not the expert, the machine shop is. Any machinist that would look at the crack in that block and not tell the customer about it is a HACK. Seriously. If that's how you do business, then you don't deserve to do business, PERIOD.
It doesn't even make sense for the shop, because they're wasting their time on a cracked block that the customer will blame them for later, whether its reasonable or not. When the block leaks, the customer will blame the machine shop (even in cases where its NOT their fault) and the machine shop will lose business. Its a lose-lose for the machinist to do any work on that block. Any time spent on the block is a waste, and time wasted = money wasted. And that doesn't even take into account the headache of dealing with the unhappy customer.
If I brought that block to my machinist and told him to bore it, he'd tell me it was cracked before I even got it out of my truck, and I'd feel dumb. On the off chance he was having a bad day, he would call me the second it came out of the hot tank and tell me it was junk. It would never even get close to being bored, let alone finished and sent back out.
The only reason to continue doing business with that shop is to see if they'll try to make it right. Unfortunately, its a bad spot to be in. The shop is either incompetent, because they didn't see the damn crack, or they're completely unscrupulous because they saw the crack and did the work anyway without telling anyone. Either way, I wouldn't be taking any more business to them in the future.