LIFTED OFF THE STROKERS LIST: Re: blower/stroker cast or forged? Posted by: "Harrel" harrel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx pontiacgto71270 Sat Jan 6, 2007 2:34 pm (PST) 7 pounds of boost is OK with a good cast pistons IF NO DETONATION OCCURS! Also be sure to use a good ductile iron top ring. >From my engine building experience, audible piston slap will begin to occur in moderate to long stroke engines once the skirt clearance is in excess of .006". However, not all forged pistons require that much skirt clearance. If you look at a custom piston, such as a Venolia, it will have holes drilled in the oil ring groove, just above the skirt, and will require a good deal of clearance for expansion. If a piston has long slots cut into the oil ring grooves above the skirts instead of holes, that piston has 'thermally isolated' skirts, and clearance is nearly constant as temperature fluctuates. However, the slots weaken the piston considerably, so metal reinforcement is added in a cast piston, which does add more weight. Most OEM replacement forged pistons have slots and no metal. They have much more resilient skirts than cast pistons and can stand extreme loads while running tight clearances. My first 455 race motor was bored to 4.21" and had TRW pistons (slotted), and I spun it to 6000 rpm with .0015" skirt clearance. Of course the bore has to be perfectly true in those conditions. The block was honed with fine stones on a CK-10 and had mirror-finish cylinders. I hope to be assembling my stroker next week and since it did not need boring, I will not be putting any type of honing device in the cylinders. I will use a very fine Scotch Brite pad and lightly scuff only the very top 2 inches of the cylinders. No use having a rough cylinder where the rings will never travel. The roughness will only scratch the skirts from high thrust loads when changing direction! --- In strokers@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, Fred Rupert <canook2u@...> wrote: I just wanted to add my $.02. I've run Venolia forged in my stroked Ram-50, (w/ 4.11" stroke), and have NEVER had the piston slap everyone talks about. I don't know the tolerance, but the pistons look to be a very tight fit. Since I'm running .100" overbore, I added an oversize radiator/ HD flex fan, and oil cooler w/ remote filter, it can take forever to warm up, but does not slap. Also, I only paid about $60.00 for each slug. Just thought I'd mention it, since most people who install blowers typically continue their search for more power, which is easily obtained by more boost. . . Fred > Dino Savva <dinosavva_no1@...> wrote: Go for hypereutectic pistons. Speed Pro and Silvolite supply hypereutectic pistons for the 4.0 and they cost about $130 for a set of 6. Hypereutectics will have no problem handling 7psi and since they don't expand as much as forged pistons, you can run a tighter piston to bore clearance and avoid cold start piston slap. > Dino > From: "Rich Perry" <rikhard@...> Reply-To: strokers@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To: strokers@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [strokers] blower/stroker cast or forged? Date: Sat, 06 Jan 2007 02:18:41 -0000 > Hello, Do I need forged pistons and rods for my 7psi blower / stroker build? Is there some kind of compromise that will avoid piston slap yet handle the blower and longer stroke? I was thinking of Dino's low compression krawler but with the add blower. I like the cost of cast, not sure if I need all the strength of forged. What to do? __________________ ain't 'Tech' grand ? =Bt= milnersXcoupe "The Heretic" _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com