davidplymouth1@
Well-Known Member
I want to know the best/efficient way to remove material from the cylinders. Do it before or after the machine boring process? Can I cut them all the same depth after I do the first one? I'm getting confusing info from 440 source and my machinist's front office. "440 source" says that after the machinist bores the cylinders first and then I order the exact kit I need. I may have to remove material from the cylinder bores for the rods by test fitting each piston into the bore. "440 source" also says that some 440's using the 500 and 512 kits need no cylinder material removed. I want to be ready if it does require material removed for the rods to clear. And that's where my machinist front office and "440 source" seem to contradict each other. I'm going with the 512 kit for sure. It's the biggest kit that doesn't require external oiling re-routing. I understand that the oil pick up hole will need to be shaved down. I can do that before it even goes to the machinist. Its' the cylinders that seem to be a hassle. 440 source says to install every piston one at a time and carefully mark and grind each bore one at a time. Then I must take the block back to my machinist to get the final hone done. "440 source" says every block is honed 2 times...once before the cylinders are notched for the rods and again after the bores are notched to hone and match fit the pistons in each bore. Why not just have the pistons fitted first, then notch all of the cylinders at once - clean everything and assemble it? And why can't I notch one cylinder and then just match the rest for the depth needed? I mean mark the sides where the rods go. But then set the depth the same for all cylinders. Why does each piston rod need to be fitted for exact clearance for each rod notch. Also, my machinist front office says no one can balance a rotating assembly without the flex plate. 440 source says they don't need the flex plate to balance everything. Which makes sense to me. I sure could use some advise on this topic. Thanks