Oil pressure depends on several factors. Bearing clearances. Was the engine built for high performance with increased bearing clearance, or street use with tight bearings. Oil pump. How tight were the clearances and was the pressure relief spring tension increased (only affects high end pressure NOT idle pressure) Type of oil used. Weight and type of oil. Heavier weight standard oil will have higher pressure. MOST engines with street clearances will have at least 10-20 lbs at hot idle. Back when the GM3800 was known as the 3.8 they had the oil pump in the front cover a lot like the AMC. Idle oil pressure was a common problem with them and it wouldn't be uncommon to see them with the lifters bleeding down and LESS than 3lbs OP at idle!!! There was a high capacity OP kit for them which could be installed in the car which increased the OP capacity by about 20% and usually cured the problem. GM's answer was that unless the lifters were noisy, or the OP light was on, to install a new OP switch which didn't turn the light on until LESS than 3lbs !!!! (stock one was 5) It sounds bad but I saw many, many of these motors go 100,000 miles like that. When they went to the 3800 they completely redesigned the OP (driven by the crank NOT the cam) and cured the problem. So engines CAN live with relatively low OP at idle as long as it comes up to spec with RPM. MOST stock OPs will deliver "about" 10-15lbs per 1000 RPM and top pressure will be "about" 40-50 with a stock relief spring. If it's a HP motor with increased bearing clearances the OP needs to be modified to keep up with the increased oil flow. Remember oil flow past the bearings is NOT linear. It increases at "about" 3 times the increase in clearance. A .001 increase in clearance will require THREE times more flow !!!!!! I like to see my modified motors with at least 20 at idle and then hit the relief within a few thousand RPM. Too much pressure can be a problem. It puts a larger load on the drive gear which can result in cam gear failure and "wash out" bearings. Small block Fords (with their narrow rod bearings) need more than Chevys so it also depends on the application. But HEY,,,, that's just ME!!! Bruce Hevner -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://list.amc-list.com/pipermail/amc-list-amc-list.com/attachments/20101114/97109a1b/attachment.htm> _______________________________________________ AMC-list mailing list AMC-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://list.amc-list.com/listinfo.cgi/amc-list-amc-list.com