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Molnar Rods?

Hello all,

I'm comparison shopping new rods for my 3.4 build, compared to having my orignals resized, rebushed, and using ARP bolts.

New rods are going to be more expensive but there are some weight savings to be realized.

Other than the usual $1,700 options from Carrillo and Pauter one option is Molnar:

https://molnarrods.com/porsche-964-connecting-rods

They are considerably cheaper than the other alternatives and are competitive in terms of weight.

Not sure the typical weight of a stock 3.2 rod w/bolts but pretty sure it's +100g or more than these so that's a pretty nice weight savings.

Anyone have experience with them? A search comes up completely empty.

Thanks in advance!!!

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Old 02-03-2022, 07:03 AM
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They're well known (well, mostly, anyway) in American V8 circles. AFAIK, they're lumped with Scat and Eagle, being overseas 4340 steel. Tom Molnar used to own K1. Some of their stuff WAS US made, but I'd call them and ask.

Carrillos are 4330 vacuum melt steel, US made. Pauters are also US made.
Old 02-03-2022, 09:51 AM
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A builder of Porsche and American engines who I trust told me he likes Molnar. Granted it was a few years ago, no idea whether anything about their situation changed since then. I didn't realize they're making Porsche rods now.
Old 02-03-2022, 02:24 PM
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My stock 1986 930 rods weight 694 g each. This is a big savings in weight. I had not planned on rods for my rebuild......... But this does have me thinking.
Old 02-03-2022, 04:08 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dannobee View Post
They're well known (well, mostly, anyway) in American V8 circles. AFAIK, they're lumped with Scat and Eagle, being overseas 4340 steel. Tom Molnar used to own K1. Some of their stuff WAS US made, but I'd call them and ask.

Carrillos are 4330 vacuum melt steel, US made. Pauters are also US made.
They are made in China, and "finish machined in the USA" to what they claim is a decent tolerance.

with 3/8" ARP bolts they should be actually a bit stronger than the 9mm replacement bolts for the 3.2 Carrera.

I'm guessing if they made an SC rod (they don't) they'd have gained a bit more attention on the forum. As it happens the 3.2 and 964 share rod dimensions.

I would stand to shave a good 100g per rod off the motor. Not a bad thing.
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Old 02-03-2022, 04:51 PM
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Carrillos for 3.2/3.3/964 weigh 585 gms, for reference.
Old 02-03-2022, 05:23 PM
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I'd venture a guess that any quality aftermarket rod is a substantial upgrade over stock, even with better rod bolts.
Old 02-03-2022, 07:07 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dannobee View Post
Carrillos for 3.2/3.3/964 weigh 585 gms, for reference.
The lightweight version of the Pauter rods are 545g.

The Molnar rods are 565g so right in there. Seem like a lot of positive reviews from around the net of the products, and the man himself (Tom Molnar) has experience and reputation to back up the product.
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Last edited by Jonny042; 02-22-2022 at 04:45 AM..
Old 02-04-2022, 04:14 AM
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Not trying to crap on the idea of better rods. Just thought it worth mentioning that I have always found it odd what a wide spread in weight groups there are for the factory rod groups. So I figured i'd ask if anybody knows why Porsche did that.


Took this snapshot from the '84 to '87 tech spec booklet. On the low side of the weight groups, 615g to 687g is a BIG difference!


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Old 02-04-2022, 08:50 AM
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There’s also a Swedish brand called Verdi. Good quality

Not sure who sells them in the US
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Old 02-04-2022, 09:08 AM
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Autoverdi makes some of the best stuff money can buy. We used their dry sump oil pumps in nascar. They also make an oil pump for 911's.
Old 02-04-2022, 10:03 AM
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Wow, so my engine has the heaviest rods? Weight group 11. They are nicely matched, one is 693 grams, 5 are 694. Was this normal on the turbo cars??
Old 02-04-2022, 11:30 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by KTL View Post
Not trying to crap on the idea of better rods. Just thought it worth mentioning that I have always found it odd what a wide spread in weight groups there are for the factory rod groups. So I figured i'd ask if anybody knows why Porsche did that.


Took this snapshot from the '84 to '87 tech spec booklet. On the low side of the weight groups, 615g to 687g is a BIG difference!


I have wondered that exact thing. I guess there can be a wide range of rough forging weights, maybe as tooling wears or ?? so easier to sort them than manufacture them to a finer tolerance??
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Old 02-04-2022, 11:57 AM
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Getting closer to pulling the trigger on these but notice that the small end width matches that of the 993 rod which is 5mm smaller than the 3.2/964 rod.

Seems like this would impart more bending force on the pin than necessary. Of course custom pistons would be the fix for this but I'm trying to avoid that since pistons are on order.....

Thoughts anyone?
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Old 02-17-2022, 05:19 AM
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Porsche apparently rethought the rod design in the 993 engine. Take a look at this 964 vs 993 engine document from Porsche. The mention of the 993 rod vs 964 rod is on pdf page 57, which is published page 53

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B7Bo-8bAu9G9NUY3YUJQcjFJTW8/view?usp=drivesdk&resourcekey=0-wMe-9TYRISmq7Hi3nqVJpw

Apparently the “footprint” of the earlier rods (they all look the same shape, despite different dimensions) is needlessly fat? I’m not saying the 993 rods are spectacular. Just saying the earlier rods are fatties

Edit: I would contact Molnar and ask them if it’s a typo in their specs for the 964. Like you said, the pin end dimension is narrower and the description in the grouping of specs on the 964 page says “993 and 996”
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Last edited by KTL; 02-17-2022 at 07:11 AM.. Reason: mention of apparent incorrect Molnar specs
Old 02-17-2022, 06:59 AM
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The 993 rods were thinner do to crank webbing being made thicker. The 964 rod is thicker and design goes all the way back to 78 3.3 turbo (probably earlier). 993 rod design was able to take advantage of CAD analysis and looks very different from earlier rods.

993 Rod



964 Rod



I believe that for racing and high RPM use (GT3) Porsche went back to wider journal. GT3 rods and same dimension as 3.0 SC and 996 Turbo uses same rod as 993.


john
Old 02-17-2022, 10:29 AM
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I think Porsche kept playing with the trade offs between crank stiffness and bearing area.

Larger journals have more overlap with the mains making a stronger stiffer crank, the 993 crank should be the stiffest of the stock cranks with the narrow journals and large diameter but at the cost of bearing area and higher bearing speed.

GT3 they went back to the SC size journal for more oil pump clearance/bigger rod bolts and evidently deemed the crank stiffness to be acceptable. GT3 rods have the same shape as a 964 and earlier style rod but are titanium for the weight savings.
Old 02-17-2022, 11:56 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by KTL View Post
Porsche apparently rethought the rod design in the 993 engine. Take a look at this 964 vs 993 engine document from Porsche. The mention of the 993 rod vs 964 rod is on pdf page 57, which is published page 53

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B7Bo-8bAu9G9NUY3YUJQcjFJTW8/view?usp=drivesdk&resourcekey=0-wMe-9TYRISmq7Hi3nqVJpw

Apparently the “footprint” of the earlier rods (they all look the same shape, despite different dimensions) is needlessly fat? I’m not saying the 993 rods are spectacular. Just saying the earlier rods are fatties

Edit: I would contact Molnar and ask them if it’s a typo in their specs for the 964. Like you said, the pin end dimension is narrower and the description in the grouping of specs on the 964 page says “993 and 996”
That factory tech info is fascinating, thanks!

I'm thinking of a plan "C", that being scouring ebay for the lightest set of matched 3.2/964 rods I can find and sending them off as cores to be resized with the ARP bolts and new bushes.

Yeah the Molnar website leaves a bit to be desired. Didn't get around to calling them yet but it's on the to-do list.
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Old 02-17-2022, 12:37 PM
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Why not get some Carrillo rods and be done with it?

The money you save with other options just ended up costing you more down the road....
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Old 02-17-2022, 01:14 PM
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Great Information

Old 02-18-2022, 09:06 PM
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