>Don't know if they are still available out there, but Muskegon always gave me the best bang for my >buck. I'd slap those suckers into some pretty badly worn motors and they would still seat in less than >1,000 miles and get over a year's running without power loss, even when ran hard. I was a warehouse dist for Muskegon when I had my shop. They were some of the best on the market back then, VERY high quality (made in the US). I sold LOTS of them. Then in 88 (I think) Dana Corp bought them and stopped marketing them at retail although they were still available to engine rebuilders. They were gradually brought into the Perfect Circle brand. Then in 98 ( a year after I closed my shop) they started to drop the Muskegon part numbers and go to Perfect Circle part numbers and Muskegon was on its way out. In 05 Dana closed the Muskegon foundry and I think Muskegon is totally gone now. I think all of it is now under the Federal-Mogul. Most in my area are now selling Hastings rings. I'm not fond of them at all. Especially their oil ring. I like PC much better. Especially their "Speed Pro" line. Not as good as TotalSeal but not as expensive either. >Unless it's a race car or something that will be pushed a lot I'd use standard cast rings. Chrome-molys >last longer but are hard to seat in a relatively slow turning engine like the AMC six. I used them twice, >and had problems getting the rings to seat. On the first one I literally had to overheat the engine (like >boiling over overheating!) before the rings would seat (it was a 196 L-head). The second time took a >lot of hard running and over 2000 miles before they were fully seated. For a mostly street car it's just >not worth it! Standard rings should seat in the first 500 miles and last over 100K if the engine isn't run >extremely hot or overheated too many times and otherwise taken care of. I've had a couple engines >with stock type cast rings go nearly 200K before they started using much oil and noticeably lose power >(compression). I think you are confusing CHROME rings with MOLY (plain Moly or PLASMA MOLY). Chrome-MOLY is a type of steel. It's a common mistake. Hard Chrome has been used as an anti-wear coating on rings for a LONG time both retail and OE level. Hard Chrome CAN be difficult to seat if the bore is not finished properly or if ANY anti-friction lube is used on the rings for installation. How did you know your rings were not seated? If it was a compression problem then it would have been the top ring. If it was an oil consumption problem it would have been the second ring since the top ring does not perform oil control. This is known as having a "wet cylinder" and is most commonly caused by using an anti-friction lube on the rings for assembly preventing the second ring from seating. The second ring does double duty both backup compression to the top ring and oil control. Plain cast rings are most used for "economy" rebuilds are generally easy to seat but not as long lasting as "coated rings" Hard Chrome rings (while harder to seat) are MUCH longer lasting and easier on the cylinder walls. Many Japanese engines (especially Toyota) used to put Hard Chrome on BOTH the top compression ring AND the second compression-oil control ring! Plain MOLY coated rings (cast or Ductile) are easier to seat than Hard Chrome but tend not to last quite as long and not be quite as easy on the cyl walls. PLASMA-MOLY is the latest in common ring coatings. It is sprayed on the face of the ring with a plasma torch (hence it's name). It has a much higher melting temp than Hard Chrome while seating about like reg Moly. This is what you will commonly find on high end competition rings but is also used at the OE level. When installing pistons I don't use ANY type of anti-friction lube like STP or engine assembly lube on the rings. This can cause a "wet cylinder". I use ONLY a few drops of 3-1 oil in the ring grooves and a few drops rubbed into the cylinder walls with my hand and then the excess removed with a cloth. I put a FEW drops of anti-friction lube on the SKIRTS ONLY of a WARM piston. After letting it soak in I REMOVE the excess with a rag. Do NOT allow ANY of the anti-friction lube to contact the rings OR cylinders. This is the procedure recommended to me by an engineer from one of the ring companies about 20 years ago. I have NEVER had a ring seating problem since I have been doing it this way. But HEY,,, that's just ME!! Bruce Hevner -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://splatter.wps.com/pipermail/amc-list/attachments/20081018/4b1d330d/attachment.htm _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list