LOL, yes, tolerances and clearances are everything on a rotating assemblyDarius wrote:You NEED to be precise with this. It isnt something you can just do in your basement.
you never know what some people have in mind ... and we're just making sure you dont attempt a home version of crank machining... duct tape cant fix this one loll0nestar wrote:Woah woah woah guys, I'm not attempting to do this myself. I'm going to a machine shop tomorrow. I was just interested for a reference. I'm taking my crank, oil pump, and girdle with me there. I know that unless you are a professional, a rotating assembly is nothing to mess with! Uh... thanks for the help?
On a side note, what bearings did everyone use, where did you get them, and how much? Yes I have been searching, I found that the ACL's are around $300. Looking into getting OEM instead.
I think you posted in the wrong threadRB_Dreamin wrote:king only offers 2 sizes? thats a little rough isnt it?
how do you get your oil clearances to match without machining your crank to fit the bearing?
i wouldn't think its safe to buy a pack of standard size and just polishing your crank. unless your crank has all the same journal sizes already and all of them match with the king bearings...
oem and nismo have 7 main bearing sizes and 3 rod bearing sizes.
I believe Matt @ GTR Shop would have something different to say. He made a post with all three pumps next to each other and dis-assembled. There is more of a difference between the OEM and N1 than just 'a spring'. I would normally waste the 15-20 minutes to find it, but I am taking my wife out to dinner tonight.Evo_bill wrote:I don't understand why everyone thinks replacing the crank pump drive collar and a N1 oil pump is going to "fix" the oil pump breaking issue.
The reason for the difference is that a N1 oil pump is the same as a stock pump with the exception of having a stiffer pump spring, thus it still has as high of potential of breaking.
nope, wrong again. i was responding to what Darius posted about bearings.Evo_bill wrote:
I think you posted in the wrong thread
the truth is it DOES help the situation. and a more expensive pump with just larger gears is supposed to not die from a misshift on a launch?Evo_bill wrote:I wasn't looking for a fight, I was just simply saying I didn't know why people buy N1 if its not going to help the situation. According to RB motoring N1 is a stock pump with a different drive collar.
Btw, I don't need pistons for my realistic daily driving hp goal.I have ported and port matched the oil returns on the block and head.And my 700whp comment was about something totally different, wheel hop. And actually I've heard of someone misshifting and killing their N1 pump during a launch.
Modified by Evo_bill at 1:39 PM 2/2/2007
well, you wouldn't have to worry that it will be "in my eyes" the worst thing to let go as Jun oil pump is pruven to be good up to 10k rpm. I'd rather puting that 700 bucks in piston work toward a more reliable pump. And also This is stright off the Jun web site... your concerns about the oil starvation issues. "HIGH FLOW OIL PUMPSRB_Dreamin wrote:the truth is it DOES help the situation. and a more expensive pump with just larger gears is supposed to not die from a misshift on a launch?
clearly you're not getting the point here. what does underlining JUNs statement have anything to do with this? just do everyone a favor and save yourself some embarrassment... stop posting until you're ready to put up your 700+whp dynoEvo_bill wrote:well, you wouldn't have to worry that it will be "in my eyes" the worst thing to let go as Jun oil pump is pruven to be good up to 10k rpm. I'd rather puting that 700 bucks in piston work toward a more reliable pump. And also This is stright off the Jun web site... your concerns about the oil starvation issues. "HIGH FLOW OIL PUMPS
JUN developed High flow oil pumps for the engine which may become lack of oil quantity when high revolution. With a tuning engine overusing high revolution, lack of oil becomes a serious problem. We designed new gears in the oil pumps to increase flowing oil quantity. Use our oil pump before the trouble occurred around turbines or crank."
Modified by Evo_bill at 2:32 PM 2/2/2007