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We built motors in school but never ran them after so who knows.
I def have the patience and the skill set to build a motor though. As long as I have a engine building book for specs and how to piece things together, the only other thing I would need is money. lol
I'd love to eventually build and boost the motor in my Kia. Forged rods and pistons alone go for 1k a piece, so a proper engine build on this car, with tuning, would run a pretty good deal of money. It's a long term goal. lol
The true test of a rebuild is what happens after you add fuel for the first time. I've put 20k on my Prelude since I rebuilt it, so far so good. I've lost count how many times that car has almost tickled the fuel cut.
BB6 Prelude . . E36 ///M3 .. VA WRX Limited . . 1969 Nova
Originally posted by Ollie
We all love to turn heads. Sub-consciously we're all materialistic attention-craving dickheads.
if the stock motors manage to last 20years, I don't see the need for anything more than an OEM build, unless you are going big power, but I just want to build some motors for a reliable 200kw thrashing day in and day out
The true test of a rebuild is what happens after you add fuel for the first time. I've put 20k on my Prelude since I rebuilt it, so far so good. I've lost count how many times that car has almost tickled the fuel cut.
When you add fuel and are going to crank it for the first time, those are indeed some very tense moments. I had a buddy rebuild a motor for a car in college, I was there when he first went to start it. He was so nervous. lol
need to crank for a while without fuel to get the oil pressure up in the engine and everything lubricated otherwise adding fuel would wash the bores if it don't start straight away
When you add fuel and are going to crank it for the first time, those are indeed some very tense moments. I had a buddy rebuild a motor for a car in college, I was there when he first went to start it. He was so nervous. lol
Shit I am nervous about mine and I haven't even finished the assembly yet.
if the stock motors manage to last 20years, I don't see the need for anything more than an OEM build, unless you are going big power, but I just want to build some motors for a reliable 200kw thrashing day in and day out
I'm at the age now where OEM is best. Shit, I want to put an OEM air box back on my Prelude at some point.
When you add fuel and are going to crank it for the first time, those are indeed some very tense moments. I had a buddy rebuild a motor for a car in college, I was there when he first went to start it. He was so nervous. lol
No matter how many timing belts/engine rebuilds/major teardowns I do, the first start is always the most stressful moment.
I'm on my 6th? engine rebuild/refresh, and it never gets any easier.
need to crank for a while without fuel to get the oil pressure up in the engine and everything lubricated otherwise adding fuel would wash the bores if it don't start straight away
100% right.
I always pull the fuse for the fuel pump and disconnect the coil. Turn over for a solid 10-15 seconds, stop, repeat. Check all the fluids, look for leaks, then insert the fuse for the fuel pump. Crank, check for fuel leaks, stop. After everything has been gone through, double-check your timing/plug wire placement, then you connect the coil and pray to God that it fires.
BB6 Prelude . . E36 ///M3 .. VA WRX Limited . . 1969 Nova
Originally posted by Ollie
We all love to turn heads. Sub-consciously we're all materialistic attention-craving dickheads.
I'm at the age now where OEM is best. Shit, I want to put an OEM air box back on my Prelude at some point.
No matter how many timing belts/engine rebuilds/major teardowns I do, the first start is always the most stressful moment.
I'm on my 6th? engine rebuild/refresh, and it never gets any easier.
100% right.
I always pull the fuse for the fuel pump and disconnect the coil. Turn over for a solid 10-15 seconds, stop, repeat. Check all the fluids, look for leaks, then insert the fuse for the fuel pump. Crank, check for fuel leaks, stop. After everything has been gone through, double-check your timing/plug wire placement, then you connect the coil and pray to God that it fires.
I have acquired a free S13 airbox that I will be fitting to my car for that stealth look
6th engine rebuild, fark did any of them go wrong?
I just unplug the crank angle sensor as it can't fire injectors or spark without it
I have acquired a free S13 airbox that I will be fitting to my car for that stealth look
6th engine rebuild, fark did any of them go wrong?
I just unplug the crank angle sensor as it can't fire injectors or spark without it
My Prelude went south, unfortunately. Everything interal was fine, but I forgot to ground the engine to the chassis.
Turn the key on, all the dash lights lit up dimly and flickered, nothing worked. Couldn't figure it out to save my life. I finally figured it out after tearing the wiring harness apart for the second time. Once I got it running, I couldn't get it to idle worth a shit. Idle dropped off super quick from shifting, and it would randomly die when it had to come to an idle slowing down. Turns out I left a piece of tape over the idle air control valve.
No major mechanical failures, thank God. I take my time and triple-check everything I do.
So far:
-350sbc in my Monte
-350sbc in my friend's old lot car (ran like a scalded rat)
-H22A4 in my friend's old Prelude (sold with 10k on the rebuild)
-F22B1 in my old red Accord (timing belt job)
-F22B4 in a friend's Accord (timing belt, head work, and clutch. In a week.)
-H22A4 in my Prelude
-D16Z6 in my younger brother's Civic
I don't know if I would count the timing belt service on my old Accord.
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