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#1 |
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Moderator
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One of the most asked questions is how do I break in my new motor? The short answer is that no break-in is necessary. The only thing that is necessary is to seat the rings. All clearances and fitments should be perfect after blueprinting and precision assembly. So how many miles do you have to drive it to seat the rings? The cylinders are round, the rings are round, the bore is freshly honed and therefore your engine should be ready for tuning immediately. They will continue to seat better over a short period of time but you should be ready to go tune right away.
Do I need to drive it 500 miles before I tune it? Absolutely not. How about 50 miles? No. Perhaps the best thing to do is to drive it all the way to your trailer and tow it to a competent tuner. In second position on the “things NOT to do list” is trying to break in an un-tuned engine by driving it. Too lean an air/fuel will begin to heat and distort parts, too rich will wash the oil off the cylinders causing premature wear. What is in first place on the “things NOT to do list”? Boost on an un-tuned motor. Within 2 to 3 seconds the pistons and cylinders can be ruined. Well I did put in a new base map or I’m just running off the stock Honda computer. Can’t I drive it like that for a few miles? I’m not even boosting. Well what is the base map? Just someone’s idea of what numbers will start your car. Just an educated guess by someone who does not have a clue what components you are running in your set-up. It’s not intended to drive on for any extended period of time. The same with that stock Honda computer. It could be ok but it could also be dangerously wrong. So what exactly do I do at the first engine start-up? Pull the spark plugs and crank the motor with your starter for a maximum of 30 seconds or until you see the oil pressure gauge begin to register. Re-install the plugs and wires and fire up that candle. While keeping one eye on the oil pressure gauge, use your other eye to scan for fuel leaks. If there are no fuel leaks, look under the motor for any major oil or coolant leaks. If that is ok, run the engine for 5 to 10 minutes while keeping an eye on the temperature and pressure gauges. Keep the rpm’s between 1000-3000. Shut the engine down and double-check everything. You are now ready for tuning. But my engine was already tuned from my previous set-up. Well, what happened to your previous set-up? Did you melt a stock piston or crack a cylinder? No problem because now you have forged pistons and sleeves? Wrong. Although you now have stronger components that will take more abuse, you are still not right on your air fuel mixture. Get that thing tuned properly ASAP. OK, I did it my way instead of yours and now I’m burning a lot of oil. What happened? Well basically you scarred up the skirt of the piston, messed up the surface of the cylinder wall and maybe even egg shaped the cylinder. New pistons are tapered smaller on the top to larger at the bottom of the skirt. Your piston to wall clearance is measured at the bottom of the skirt. As the engine warms up to operating temperature, the upper portion of the piston begins to expand slightly. The bottom of the skirt does not expand much. When you boost in a lean condition, the upper part of the piston expands quickly. Since the ring land area is cut smaller than the tapered skirt below it, the first part of the piston that pushes into the cylinder wall is just below the oil ring. Thus you will see the worst scarring on your piston right under the ring lands where the excess heat is the highest The more heat that is generated, the harder the piston pushes into the cylinder wall. The uninformed would blame the piston damage on bad piston to wall clearance. Untrue. If that were the problem, the damage would show up at the very bottom of the skirt. What has happened is that you have expanded your piston to the point that it has just ground itself into the cylinder wall. Keep expanding the piston by super heating it and it will push your cylinder egg shaped and maybe even balloon out the cylinder slightly. At the same time this is happening, your ring lands will begin to distort to where they will never seal properly again. Sometimes after doing this, the engine will still run but it will be a smoker. This all happens in a few seconds of high boost with a lean air fuel ratio. Also it can happen from 500 freeway miles of driving where the tune up is off enough to build excess heat at a slower rate, thus doing the same damage over a longer period of time…but the end results are the same. Death to your pistons and cylinder walls. OK, I’m just going to turn the fuel pressure way up and run extra fat, that way I won’t hurt anything. If you run too rich, you will “wash out” the rings. First, excess fuel will run down the cylinders taking the lubricating oil with it. This promotes direct metal-to-metal contact between the rings and the cylinder wall. This contact does several things. The upper ring begins to wear quickly. The middle ring is actually designed as a tapered oil scraper (it is not used for compression control at all) and the taper will begin to wear down to where it becomes flat rather than angled. When that happens, it can no longer control oil away from the combustion chamber. The last thing that happens is that pretty cross hatch design begins to wear off of the cylinder wall. While most people think that the cross hatch is there to help seat the rings, it also has a secondary purpose. That is to hold microscopic amounts of oil in the grooves to help lubricate ring to cylinder walls. With the walls smooth and no oil control help from the middle ring and a tired upper ring, oil will begin to mix with fuel in the combustion chamber. When this happens, your 93 octane fuel probably hits a value of about 80. Then detonation comes into play and begins to beat holes in the pistons, among other things. So whom can I blame for this mess? The blind machinist that honed my piston to wall clearance? That poor quality Brand X piston manufacturer? The idiot pro engine builder that assembled my block? My ex-friend that helped me put this all together? Those ignorant engineers that gave me a bad base map with my engine management system? The guy on the internet message board whose buddy knows that it takes at least 1000 miles of break in before you can tune an engine properly? All of the above? Probably none of the above. Go look in a mirror and ask…who started this engine and had no idea what the air fuel ratio was? Who just wanted to jump on it one time to see if it would haul? Who didn’t know that their injectors were at 100% duty cycle at 4000 rpm but they wanted to see how it would run at 6000 rpm? Why it was you. Get that thing tuned right away. You will notice that the more you drive a tuned motor, the stronger it will feel. This is just the rings seating in their final 5-10% as they thank you for tuning first.
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WE SELL Benson Machine Sleeved blocks & cranks SuperTech SS Valves, Dual Springs, Ti Retainers CP Pistons & rings ACL Bearings Pauter - Eagle - Manley Rods DriveShaftShop Axles ATI Dampners BDL/STR Products PWR Radiators & Intercoolers Quaife Dif Head porting by PortFlow now available Custom built race and street engines..K, B, H, F, D cores in stock Have a Question?..Call 714.688.0222 (shop) http://www.laskeyracing.com |
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#2 |
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Very useful information! I am glad this was posted. I am nearing completion of my motor and want it running asap!
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My vouch thread http://www.honda-tech.com/zerothread?id=839104 94 civic coupe B18C1 built and boosted never saw the road need to sell motor 04 GTO Blk/Red Corsa Exhaust |
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#3 | |
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Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Not in the United Kingdom.
Posts: 646
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Just in time for my motor!
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#4 |
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Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Turboville
Posts: 1,149
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earl saves the day
EDIT-make this a sticky
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94 Full-Race T3/67 powered GSR sedan (blowed up & gone http://images.honda-tech.com/set1/smile/emsad.gif ) |
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#5 |
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Senior Member
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best post yet i saved this on motor break in
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New Project in the works. |
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#6 |
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Senior Member
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well earl you have learned me on this and i am going to use your method , well i guess i will have to get a rollback well its worth it to wait and do it right
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http://www.evans-tuning.com/ http://images.honda-tech.com/set1/smile/emthup.gif Arturbo http://images.honda-tech.com/set1/smile/emthup.gif DB Squad Member #89 |
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#7 |
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Senior Member
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I would still break in my motor with miles. I feel an engine needs to be heat treated. Just my opinion and this wouldnt be the 1st time we had difference of opinions.
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10.006@150mph T1 Race Development -Competition Clutch -Full-Race Motorsports iLove me some me.. |
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#8 |
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Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: USA
Posts: 622
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Good info earl. I have a quick question though. Is it okay to start the newly built engine on a previous tune? I know you said to not drive the car around without it being tuned first. Also do you recommend changing the oil after the 5-10 minute start up?
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#9 |
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Bigger than you think
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: in the club
Posts: 7,099
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Wow...excellent write up man. Thanks alot
Arbi, who actually learned something there
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#10 |
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Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: TX
Posts: 4,164
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This is real good info. I almost got my motor completed. Now I feel like I was ripped getting that base map burned now
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#11 | |
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Moderator
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Quote:
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WE SELL Benson Machine Sleeved blocks & cranks SuperTech SS Valves, Dual Springs, Ti Retainers CP Pistons & rings ACL Bearings Pauter - Eagle - Manley Rods DriveShaftShop Axles ATI Dampners BDL/STR Products PWR Radiators & Intercoolers Quaife Dif Head porting by PortFlow now available Custom built race and street engines..K, B, H, F, D cores in stock Have a Question?..Call 714.688.0222 (shop) http://www.laskeyracing.com |
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#12 |
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Join Date: May 2001
Location: Midwest
Posts: 6,992
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Very good post.
How would you suggest driving a long distance to a tuner with a stock engine? Drive there on basemaps, or drive there with the stock ecu and be very carefull not to hit any boost?
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2000 CX b18c1 turbo sold http://images.honda-tech.com/set1/smile/emsad.gif 1997 HX b16a2 turbo sold 1996 Miata 1994 RX7 http://images.honda-tech.com/set1/smile/emsmile.gif LS2 Swap in progress. |
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#13 | |
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Moderator
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Higher compression with the better seal. What I am preaching is that it is better to tune first than to chance ruining your new motor.
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WE SELL Benson Machine Sleeved blocks & cranks SuperTech SS Valves, Dual Springs, Ti Retainers CP Pistons & rings ACL Bearings Pauter - Eagle - Manley Rods DriveShaftShop Axles ATI Dampners BDL/STR Products PWR Radiators & Intercoolers Quaife Dif Head porting by PortFlow now available Custom built race and street engines..K, B, H, F, D cores in stock Have a Question?..Call 714.688.0222 (shop) http://www.laskeyracing.com |
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#14 | |
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Moderator
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Quote:
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WE SELL Benson Machine Sleeved blocks & cranks SuperTech SS Valves, Dual Springs, Ti Retainers CP Pistons & rings ACL Bearings Pauter - Eagle - Manley Rods DriveShaftShop Axles ATI Dampners BDL/STR Products PWR Radiators & Intercoolers Quaife Dif Head porting by PortFlow now available Custom built race and street engines..K, B, H, F, D cores in stock Have a Question?..Call 714.688.0222 (shop) http://www.laskeyracing.com |
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#15 | |
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H-T Sponsor
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#16 |
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Senior Member
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Thanks for the info Earl.
June
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http://www.myspace.com/phillymosth8ted |
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#17 |
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Senior Member
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pretty interesting.
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#18 |
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Senior Member
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A LEV perfectly tuned car from honda still recomends a break in. They have millions of dollars of machine work than what most people have in there machine shops to make everything perfect. Even with a perfectly tuned motor from Honda requires a break in. I just dont think Honda would print that just to take up space in an owner's manual.
I do agree that an engine must be perfectly tuned. Honda tunes their cars pretty conservative at around 11.8:1 AFR. Also, take note that running too rich can cause you to detonate too.. art
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10.006@150mph T1 Race Development -Competition Clutch -Full-Race Motorsports iLove me some me.. |
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#20 | |
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Moderator
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Quote:
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WE SELL Benson Machine Sleeved blocks & cranks SuperTech SS Valves, Dual Springs, Ti Retainers CP Pistons & rings ACL Bearings Pauter - Eagle - Manley Rods DriveShaftShop Axles ATI Dampners BDL/STR Products PWR Radiators & Intercoolers Quaife Dif Head porting by PortFlow now available Custom built race and street engines..K, B, H, F, D cores in stock Have a Question?..Call 714.688.0222 (shop) http://www.laskeyracing.com |
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#21 | |
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: It says BIGBOOST
Posts: 371
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"Meltdown" Something I've been trying to illustrate for the longest.
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![]() <TABLE WIDTH="90%" CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=0 ALIGN=CENTER><TR><TD>Quote »</TD></TR><TR><TD CLASS="quote">Completely different situation. They have thousands and thousands of engineering tuning hours designing their ecu for proper fuel ratios under any load or condition. This is meant for the average H-T that is building a high performance engine for the first time.</TD></TR></TABLE> I can understand Arturbo's P.O.V. If you take a peek into the break-in procedure for an S2k, Honda does all but tell you to beat the living crap out of the car. I'm confident that this isn't something that they'd recommend if it weren't a neccessity. |
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