19-10-2020, 10:01 AM
Not a bodge - but how does a Chummy door handle get into this state? Not only rusty, but flattened as well.
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The problems never end
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19-10-2020, 10:01 AM
Not a bodge - but how does a Chummy door handle get into this state? Not only rusty, but flattened as well.
19-10-2020, 10:28 AM
Threw a mildly bent fan blade away the other day, it would have straightened but not worth the risk.
(18-10-2020, 03:30 PM)Steve Jones Wrote: Not a bodge as such but a repair to an insignificant issue that caused more damage than the issue it was trying to repair! This was a definitely a bodge. It's the rotor arm of an ML RF4 magneto, remanufactured from wood with a brass strip screwed on. The mag came from Australia where the climate may have been more tolerant. Charles
19-10-2020, 05:10 PM
Hi,
Your opinion about those please: I would like to forget about them as it was said above but? Thanks anyway, Renaud
19-10-2020, 05:14 PM
(19-10-2020, 05:10 PM)Renaud Wrote: Hi, It's not the greatest picture but the rest of the bore looks far from good either. I wouldn't reuse that. In the case above the engine has even, good compression and doesn't burn oil/oil a plug so it's acceptable. c
19-10-2020, 05:33 PM
Well, these days I’d change it, but looking back 30 odd years yes I think I would have honed it and used it again.
Alan Fairless
19-10-2020, 05:35 PM
19-10-2020, 07:05 PM
I know I already asked but is there any way of filling those gouges in the cylinder wall, they can't be good and while I've got the the piston out I thought I'd like to try sorting it otherwise I'll be paranoid while driving just waiting for it to start burning oil.
19-10-2020, 07:32 PM
I think any form of adding metal will be difficult. I’d be worried about distortion and it becoming detached at some stage. You could get just that cylinder relined - not sure how much that would cost but more than a hundred quid I’m sure. You could burn an awful lot of oil for that.
Alan Fairless
19-10-2020, 10:08 PM
(This post was last modified: 19-10-2020, 10:14 PM by Ian McGowan.)
I would say that there is little doubt that those "tram line" gouges are a result of a loose gudgeon pin resulting from a broken/ loose pinch bolt. When I suffered that, a few years ago now, the broken-in-thread pinch bolt, in exiting the conrod, smashed two pieces of piston from the skirt - not a happy state of affairs. The piston was destroyed, the conrod was damaged beyond repair, all because the previous rebuilder had not used the correct, new, HT pinch bolts!!
( on the up side, I later successfully reused the gouged block in a different engine bored out to +80 thou to accommodate Renault 4 pistons) |
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