Joined: Mar 2019 Posts: 23 Threads: 4
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Location: France
Car type: Nippy x 2
Hello all, I'll be putting the engine back in my Nippy later today. One of the engine mounts had a spring on it, but I can't remember which one. Does it matter which one ? I believe owners do this because of chassis flexing.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,715 Threads: 47
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Location: Auckland NZ
Car type: 36 Nippy, 31 RM, 38 Special, 24 Works Rep
02-05-2020, 07:47 AM
(This post was last modified: 02-05-2020, 07:58 AM by Ian Williams.)
Typical 750MC generated A7 folk law in my opinion, possibly some merit in certain specific circumstances but not in normal usage. Of course you will have some spring proponents who have read bulletin articles and will say oh yes essential I have run like this for hundreds of miles and have less block leaks and no broken studs etc. But there are plenty of people out there who quietly put their engines together properly, use no spring, and do thousands of miles with no issues what so ever. So put a spring on and bolt that make's you feel happy, if you arn't trailing or racing it won't make a blind bit of difference, and if you are racing it will probably make you go slower round corners.
Black Art Enthusiast
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 747 Threads: 13
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If its a Nippy it should be a rubber mounted crankcase anyway. so spring not needed.
I think the spring theory was for three bearing engines to stop chassis twist twisting the crankcase and miss aligning the crank.
As Ian has said also depends on use.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,343 Threads: 34
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Location: Cheshire
Car type: Race Ulster, 1926 Special, 1927 Chummy, 1930 Box
Yes, and I’ve lost count of the number of crank cases I’ve seen with the mounting feet missing. Using the crankcase to stiffen the chassis is not a brilliant idea.
Alan Fairless
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 641 Threads: 29
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If you cross section a scrap crankcase you will realise how weak they really are. I think it took all of 5 minutes to hacksaw one in half and at 80 to nearly a hundred years old they deserve an easy life.
When trialling we used to use the top and bottom rubbers of the later rubber mounts with long bolts and locknuts at the rear and longer bolts bottomed out at the front.
Joined: Feb 2018 Posts: 367 Threads: 14
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Location: Western Brittany (France)
What means "bottomed out" please? Not sure I understand that! (Silly frog!)
Joined: Jan 2019 Posts: 1,575 Threads: 21
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Location: Bala North Wales
Car type: 1933 RP Standard Saloon
Renaud,
A bolt has a threaded portion at the bottom, followed by a plain shank up to the head., unlike a setpin, which is threaded all the way up its length.
A bolt " bottoms out" when one puts a nut on the reaches the end of the threaded portion without putting any tension on whatever the bolt passes through.
Hope this helps (and no, you are not a 'silly frog' - English is the most awkward of languages with lots of obscure idioms!)