motorson
VIP MEMBER
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2011
- Messages
- 521
It is shameful to admit but I advance my timing "just a little bit" after setting it with a strobe at 28 degrees. It felt just a bit "down on power" and one guy had said he got 5 extra HP on a dyno by advancing his a few degrees. I did mine by hand just a smidgeon (because I didn't have a helper around.) and felt just a bit more power and heard no knock. Then I forgot to check to see how far I had actually advanced it and took off for a long trip up to Kidron OH from Charlotte NC. It lasted the first couple hundred miles and then suddenly sounded and felt different. An off idle knock that sounded more like a clang. Well, I didn't know what was causing it so I just drove it home via Columbus OH and Lexington KY and Asheville NC. Quite a long ride and in that huge rain storm the entire way. Then I drove it to Barber and back. Comstock heard it down in Alabama and advised me to tear it down. The Lucas Rita gave up the ghost down at Barber so I have no idea how bad I screwed up the timing. Walridge sold me a Boyer for $130 at the Vintage Festival and I made it home.
Now it is torn down and the JCC pistons are scored from top to bottom. Plenty of people have told me that advancing the timing too much will do that. I had fit the pistons to .0045 so the original clearance was not the problem.
Now I have a set of .040 over pistons made by a defunct Japanese ring manufacturing company. (They still make rings but no longer make pistons.) They are cam ground way more than JCC (Emgo) pistons. The JCC pistons have about .002 taper in the skirt from the bottom to the oil ring. These have .007. The JCC pistons only have about .006 difference from the bottom of the skirt to the side perpendicular at the wrist pin. These have .046 difference there. The JCC only taper .012 from skirt to top diameter up by the rings. These taper .014 from skirt to diameter up at the rings.
In my post about "soft seize" I had fit a previous set of JCC pistons too tight. (.0025) 100% of the contact patch that caused the "soft seize" was out by the ends of the wrist pins. These new pistons have that material ground away by .046 inches. The taper in the skirt itself is greater by .005" so I am thinking that these particular pistons need to be fit tighter than the recommended .0045 for JCC pistons.
Any knowledgeable info out there?
Cheers, Dan.
Now it is torn down and the JCC pistons are scored from top to bottom. Plenty of people have told me that advancing the timing too much will do that. I had fit the pistons to .0045 so the original clearance was not the problem.
Now I have a set of .040 over pistons made by a defunct Japanese ring manufacturing company. (They still make rings but no longer make pistons.) They are cam ground way more than JCC (Emgo) pistons. The JCC pistons have about .002 taper in the skirt from the bottom to the oil ring. These have .007. The JCC pistons only have about .006 difference from the bottom of the skirt to the side perpendicular at the wrist pin. These have .046 difference there. The JCC only taper .012 from skirt to top diameter up by the rings. These taper .014 from skirt to diameter up at the rings.
In my post about "soft seize" I had fit a previous set of JCC pistons too tight. (.0025) 100% of the contact patch that caused the "soft seize" was out by the ends of the wrist pins. These new pistons have that material ground away by .046 inches. The taper in the skirt itself is greater by .005" so I am thinking that these particular pistons need to be fit tighter than the recommended .0045 for JCC pistons.
Any knowledgeable info out there?
Cheers, Dan.