This shows the impending
bearing failure on one of our rod bearings.
This was the worst one but indicated we have
a problem.
4. The 440-1
Indy heads looked great and the springs were
fresh in September so they are good. The valve
keeper grooves are starting to show signs of
"losing their edge" where the keepers sit. This
could be a disaster if they came off and we
dropped a valve. We decided three years was
a good service life for the valves and we will
replace them with Ferrea' stainless valves.
Jay used his Super Flow bench to check the port
flow and you can see the results in the photo.
Indy Cylinder Head did a great job on the heads
as they flow plenty for our soon to be 572"
Mopar.
This shows the wear pattern
caused by the notches in the cylinder walls
for crank clearance. New pistons may have a
different skirt design.
5. Here is why
you take a close look at everything: Jay removed
the J-W Fly Wheel and when he cleaned it up
he noticed a cracked weld where the ring gear
is welded to the Wheel. Man, am I glad he saw
that. I can't imagine how much damage throwing
off a starter ring could do to the transmission,
engine or possibly the entire car if it oiled
the slicks at 180 mph. THANKS JAY! It will be
the easiest $125.00 to spend this year. We are
set to order the new CP Pistons, a new ring
package that includes .043 rings and low-tension
metric oil ring set. The bearings, pistons and
pins will likely get a dry lube coating before
assembly as well.
I'll be back in a couple weeks with some more
updates. We have one of the new Indy Cylinder
Head tunnel rams in our hands right now so it
could be time for dual King Demons or... I'll
cover some of the chassis inspections we did
and upgrades we are doing in mid-December. Stay
tuned; we are shooting for 7.50s at 180 mph
out of this old Mopar.
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Project
4-Link
7/7/03
Time for a change in our racing efforts
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