I don’t know how to name this topic correctly, but tried to put everything in the title as I didn’t want to open separate topics.
Aftermarket piston quality
Long story, currently building my engine because previous owner made huge mistakes during engine assembly and after seen evidence of this, I decided to rebuild it completely (which was the right decision). Found during disassembling 2 cracked oil separation rings, that made deep scars in the cylinder walls and a very very worn and stucked oil regulation piston. That by very high chance was the reason the engine had a spun bearing by previous owner (reason he „rebuilded“ it with new rings, rods, crank etc).
Because „while I’m there“ I also decided to make bottom end forged. (Charged with a v3si).
In the past I only worked with oem pistons and not aftermarket. So after ready and speaking to some people I bought Wiseco pistons (87.25) because they were relative fast available and heard nothing bad about these. They where here rough in the same price range like Mahle Motorsport and JE-Pistons.
But the quality of what arrived is not what I expected! Is this normal for aftermarket pistons to have have oil holes clogged with metal chips and not deburred inside with metal flakes hanging around? This is not what you want to find inside your engine or elsewhere! (Next oilpump would be gone, oem pierburg is around 420€!)
I contacted Wiseco about this „quality issue“ but not received any kind of answer. What a shame. If I had the time to wait for another piston set from (definitely) a different manufacturer, they would gone directly back to the supplier! I can highly suggest to triple check your aftermarket pistons.
Anyone here that made similar experience with aftermarket pistons?
Maybe also Wiseco or other brand?
just a few pictures, they all looked the same.
Torque plate measurements
Also i made the decision to machining the block with a torque plate. Here in Germany this is not very common for iron blocks and most machine shops said it‘s not necessary, but did it anyway. Had a individual plate made in a CNC in full cylinder head thickness. After receive the block back from machining, I measures unroundness and found it quite much. Even the machine shop was very surprised that a iron block deforms that much during torquing!
Later I will use ARP head studs (they where installed during hone) but I also measured with oem head studs and found not much difference (within measuring tolerance).
I measured on 4 positions and 3 different depths, 0°,45°,90°,135° (90° is in line with crankshaft). After around 60mm the unroundness without untorqued head disappears.
I had biggest unroundness on 45° and 135° measurements. These represent the direct line between the headstuds. The minimum was 1.5 and maximum was 4. (in 1/100mm)
After torque the torque plate, I had the roundness of all cylinders perfect within the measuring tolerance of the gauge (5/1000mm)
As the head, block, measuring instruments all where cold the and the same temperature, I would assume the unroundness would even get more when the head expands more than the block and the studs will pull with even more force. So I think I would have definitely over 5/100(0.05mm) with hot head.
After gapping the first 3 rings I came to the idea to torque the plate again to see how the ring gap will look (most people told me, the torque plate will not significant change the gap). But it does! Had to reorder all of the 3 first rings, because I set the gap without torque plate to 0.50 on spot and after torquing the plate I can even fit a 0.65 feeler gauge quite easy in.
Anyone here who had also measured the block with and without torque plate? I would be happy if someone could share their experience!
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