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Hatch..should hatch be of same number all the way down the inner barrel?
I have hatch in all 6 cylinder barrels. But the hatch is more numerous on the upper non-finned inner narrow part of the barrels. Is this normal?
Thanks
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The cross hashing on the cylinders starts out the same all over. As the cylinder wears the hashing begins to dissappear. The greatest wear is near the top of the cylinder where the upper compression ring lives. If you can feel a ridge with your fingernail at the top of the cylinder where the hash marks have thined and then gets thick again you have too much wear to use the cylinders without honing them. If your cylinders are biral (they should be) then you can hone them easily. They don't have a coating to go through.
-Andy
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If, for example, your hatching is pefect all the way up and down the bores, how can you have a cylinder that's out of spec?
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Thanks
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1969 911 E Coupe "Little Bull" "Horse" "H." Heart, "G." Gears, and "P" the Porsche Last edited by H.G.P.; 12-09-2004 at 08:21 PM.. |
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Yes the top is where it mates to the heads. The greatest wear is were the top ring is during the first part of the power stroke.
Chris, If the cross hash marks are perfect all the way up and down the cylinder it will be in spec. unless it was damaged by dropping or warped in some manner. I've never seen a worn out Nickasil cylinder on my engines. (not a very big sample however) -Andy
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When you say "hone" are you referring to a grape hone? Thanks for the information.
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HGP,
When I say hone I mean just a standard stone hone. I assume you have Biral cylinders and you can use a standard stone hone to prep the surface for the new rings. You don't want to take off much metal just rough up the surface abit and take off any carbon build up (the dark part you see at the top). -Andy
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