- Joined
- Jan 2, 2006
- Messages
- 3,073
Here's the deal,
NIB CMB green head motor, Broke it down before break in to clean it out, inspect for chips, break any sharp edges in the sleeve etc... did NOT pull the wrist pin from the piston/rod, in fact I never paid attention to how it was inserted.
After a brief break in period at the pond, I pulled it apart again to look for wear patterns etc.
This time I DID notice the wrist pin orientation in the piston...as it came from CMB.
I've always heard/ been told the open end of the pin should face the exhaust port. For a couple of reasons.
#1 The pin is threaded for removal. ( which doesn't make a difference overall because on this type .67 the piston/ rod falls out when the sleeve is removed) if it was a double counterweight crank, the pin needs to be pulled first thru the exhaust port.
#2 For wrist pin/rod bushing cooling.
I guess the theory is, it lets trapped heat escape ?
Which doesn't make sense to me as the searing exhaust gas being blown into the pin would not let much heat escape..unless the tuned pipe pressure wave provides some type of cooling effect?
So my question is, did CMB intentionally install the open end of the pin facing the cool intake charge?
Or did they just screw up when they built it?
Or does it make absolutely no difference and it can face either way ?
Picture for reference,,
Also, is the rod correctly indexed with the piston ?
Currently, there are two oil relief
cuts on the crank side of the rod and a single cut @ 12 o'clock on the drum rotor side...Is this the correct orientation?
What say all ye guru's of motor wisdom??
NIB CMB green head motor, Broke it down before break in to clean it out, inspect for chips, break any sharp edges in the sleeve etc... did NOT pull the wrist pin from the piston/rod, in fact I never paid attention to how it was inserted.
After a brief break in period at the pond, I pulled it apart again to look for wear patterns etc.
This time I DID notice the wrist pin orientation in the piston...as it came from CMB.
I've always heard/ been told the open end of the pin should face the exhaust port. For a couple of reasons.
#1 The pin is threaded for removal. ( which doesn't make a difference overall because on this type .67 the piston/ rod falls out when the sleeve is removed) if it was a double counterweight crank, the pin needs to be pulled first thru the exhaust port.
#2 For wrist pin/rod bushing cooling.
I guess the theory is, it lets trapped heat escape ?
Which doesn't make sense to me as the searing exhaust gas being blown into the pin would not let much heat escape..unless the tuned pipe pressure wave provides some type of cooling effect?
So my question is, did CMB intentionally install the open end of the pin facing the cool intake charge?
Or did they just screw up when they built it?
Or does it make absolutely no difference and it can face either way ?
Picture for reference,,
Also, is the rod correctly indexed with the piston ?
Currently, there are two oil relief
cuts on the crank side of the rod and a single cut @ 12 o'clock on the drum rotor side...Is this the correct orientation?
What say all ye guru's of motor wisdom??