Originally Posted by Art
(Post 1446499)
Every engine has a limit, you might be approaching it with all the power/stress. It always seemed to me that the Accusump was quite expensive for a benefit that most don't really need or understand but maybe it would help. There are some other things with the oiling system that you might be able to improve, for example port the oil pump, chamfer/tear drop the crank oil holes, size match/chamfer/tear drop the bearing oil holes.
I'm not sure of a BP engine equivalent but something like this: The Old One - Energy Dynamics : Articles |
run amsoil dominator. I agree it is the oil, but the oil quality is not enough, I'd guess you need the polish crank, and do some additional oiling mods, maybe even run slightly looser crank bearing tolerance, and some sort of modified/reinforced crank mains.
just a huge guess |
Originally Posted by sixshooter
(Post 1446484)
I would definitely polish the crank. Oh, yeah. Polish that crank.
What oil are you going to run? Redline, Shaeffer, Amsoil, something else?
Originally Posted by Savington
(Post 1446485)
If I were building a BP to tolerate that kind of abuse:
-Billet crank -Billet caps -Sleeves -ACL HX mains/rods -Amsoil SAE60 -Boundary allofit pump
Originally Posted by Art
(Post 1446499)
Every engine has a limit, you might be approaching it with all the power/stress. It always seemed to me that the Accusump was quite expensive for a benefit that most don't really need or understand but maybe it would help. There are some other things with the oiling system that you might be able to improve, for example port the oil pump, chamfer/tear drop the crank oil holes, size match/chamfer/tear drop the bearing oil holes.
I'm not sure of a BP engine equivalent but something like this: The Old One - Energy Dynamics : Articles
Originally Posted by thumpetto007
(Post 1446502)
run amsoil dominator. I agree it is the oil, but the oil quality is not enough, I'd guess you need the polish crank, and do some additional oiling mods, maybe even run slightly looser crank bearing tolerance, and some sort of modified/reinforced crank mains.
just a huge guess So a good update. I got the new mazda bearings this morning. They looked MINT, but of course they should since they're new and expensive... Anyways got all the bearings replaced. Having now seen all the old bearings, it's obvious RPM is the main thing killing the bearings. Oh yeah, some of the bearings are HAMMERED a lot worse than the above pics. What I found was: Rod bearings, all four show more wear on bottoms shell than the top shell (suggest RPM loading more significant than power loading) All main bearings show more wear on top shells than bottom shells Front and rear main bearings show more wear than the inner 3, suggesing crank flex is a big factor. Top side of mains show a lot more wear than bottom side, again, suggest RPM related loading is a factor. I'll upload pics later, gotta try to get this thing back together right now. |
Originally Posted by patsmx5
(Post 1446557)
I don't know yet, I gotta research that and see, but looks like Amsoil is good but nobody near me has it
--Ian |
Originally Posted by codrus
(Post 1446564)
Maybe Texas outlawed Ponzi scheme oil. :)
--Ian |
I ship Amsoil Dominator all over the place. 10w30 and 15w50 in stock, I would do 15w50 in your motor.
|
Originally Posted by ryansmoneypit
(Post 1446487)
Sav, why do you suggest 60 weight oil? this always creates a flow vs pressure argument in recent..
|
Originally Posted by patsmx5
(Post 1446565)
What oil do you run?
I don't have any comments on the quality of the oil that Amsoil sells, I just don't like their marketing strategy. --Ian |
Race engines typically have loose bottom ends, as Sav said. They tolerate the stresses of revs better.
I've run Shaeffer recently because of bitog info but would run dominator just as quickly. Good stuff. |
Originally Posted by codrus
(Post 1446568)
The kind that Savington hates (Redline).
I don't have any comments on the quality of the oil that Amsoil sells, I just don't like their marketing strategy. --Ian Pat. Buy my HX bearings. Extra clearances for that loose bottom end. Bring all the boys to the yard. |
I run to 8,800 RPM constantly in my N/A engine. Sure it doesn't have the HP but I think it's revs combined with oil loss / degradation doing the damage not power. I destroyed a big end before I installed a sump baffle and all the other bearings looked pretty much exactly to yours. I think I was getting oil accumulating in the head due to the combination of big revs / cornering or braking G's and then under brakes, whilst the oil level was low, I'd get a couple of oil pressure dips. The problem with this is the pickup sucks air and even if you are running an accusump you'll get air bubbles traveling through the oiling system.
My specs: Penrite 15w-50 filled to above 'F' Stock Oil pump - oil relief blocked External oil relief valve set to 50PSI (pressure runs 50 PSI flat at anything over a few thousand RPM) External oil cooler (10AN lines) Stock crank, Crower Rods, Wiseco Pistons, no oil squirters, no VVT (BP-05) ACL Race standard sized bearings - crank / big end I change oil & filter every 3-4 events, and check levels every 2 or so runs. On a side note I buzzed the engine on Saturday hitting 3rd instead of 5th. It was a combination of brain fade and over excitement. Logs say it it 10,800rpm and I actually caught the clutch so it wasn't a full release.... otherwise we'd be talking 11,500 rpm. I completed the 2 day event but I'm tossing up if I should drop the sump and check the bearings. I think I might after reading this thread. |
Anyone used this stuff? Has good UOAs for tracking on E85.
Performance Racing Oils - Millers Oils Classic and Performance Products |
Pat pepboys, advanced, and napa all carry the valvoline VR1. It's still got a higher film strength than the amsoil.
|
Originally Posted by Leafy
(Post 1446801)
Pat pepboys, advanced, and napa all carry the valvoline VR1. It's still got a higher film strength than the amsoil.
|
Originally Posted by Savington
(Post 1446803)
At what temperature?
I found the site that I remember, and its all gunked up with oil additives but it looks like he's tested a bunch more oils since last time and there might be some even better choices. He even has the dominator oil on there, with a lower film strength than the amsoil signature series... https://540ratblog.wordpress.com/201...-test-ranking/ |
Originally Posted by sixshooter
(Post 1446574)
Race engines typically have loose bottom ends, as Sav said. They tolerate the stresses of revs better.
I've run Shaeffer recently because of bitog info but would run dominator just as quickly. Good stuff.
Originally Posted by Madjak
(Post 1446624)
I run to 8,800 RPM constantly in my N/A engine. Sure it doesn't have the HP but I think it's revs combined with oil loss / degradation doing the damage not power. I destroyed a big end before I installed a sump baffle and all the other bearings looked pretty much exactly to yours. I think I was getting oil accumulating in the head due to the combination of big revs / cornering or braking G's and then under brakes, whilst the oil level was low, I'd get a couple of oil pressure dips. The problem with this is the pickup sucks air and even if you are running an accusump you'll get air bubbles traveling through the oiling system.
My specs: Penrite 15w-50 filled to above 'F' Stock Oil pump - oil relief blocked External oil relief valve set to 50PSI (pressure runs 50 PSI flat at anything over a few thousand RPM) External oil cooler (10AN lines) Stock crank, Crower Rods, Wiseco Pistons, no oil squirters, no VVT (BP-05) ACL Race standard sized bearings - crank / big end I change oil & filter every 3-4 events, and check levels every 2 or so runs. On a side note I buzzed the engine on Saturday hitting 3rd instead of 5th. It was a combination of brain fade and over excitement. Logs say it it 10,800rpm and I actually caught the clutch so it wasn't a full release.... otherwise we'd be talking 11,500 rpm. I completed the 2 day event but I'm tossing up if I should drop the sump and check the bearings. I think I might after reading this thread.
Originally Posted by Leafy
(Post 1446801)
Pat pepboys, advanced, and napa all carry the valvoline VR1. It's still got a higher film strength than the amsoil.
It would be nice if there was an honest list of oils and their specs so people could easily compare without requiring hours and hours of searching and asking if this source that says X is oil is the best also happens to sell X oil. As an update, the bearings are in, oil pan is back on, subframe just went back in. Lordy that was work getting the subframe back in, what a pain. Gonna try to get the rest of the car back together and fire it up tonight, I hope. |
Originally Posted by patsmx5
(Post 1446807)
What kind of oil temps do you see with your setup? I assume your regulate your pressure after the cooler?
With my engine the block is grouted so it only sees a small amount of coolant running through it and I don't run oil squirters. This means all the heat load in the block needs to be handled by the oil cooler. I don't think it's massively different to other engines as most the heat in the oil is generated by oil shearing rather than heat from combustion. I also find my oil smells pretty fuelly from running E85 and I tend to get lots of water in my catch can especially at colder events. I definitely find when running E85 I need to change oil a lot more often. With the oil pressure, it doesn't really matter where you place the regulator, it's more where you measure the pressure to set it. So I have an 10AN line from the oil sandwich plate to the regulator (30cm), a return to the sump and then a line from the regulator to the oil cooler and one back to the sandwich plate. I run a Peterson oil pressure regulator which was around $200 from memory and it is super easy to adjust the pressure by winding out or in the adjustment bolt. It is a much larger diameter bore than the stock regulator and I was told that it helps stop pressure chattering at high revs (which also destroys the oil pump gear). So regardless where the regulator is located if you measure the pressure near the head or block and adjust to a target it works fine. Logs of my oil pressure pretty much sit dead flat throughout a session until the revs drop down towards idle and the relief is fully closed. |
It runs!
I spun the motor over to prime the oil system before this video with the coils/injector fuse pulled. Then reinstalled fuses and filmed this. https://youtu.be/PweO6Vo4FeQ All I did was this, and a few other startups and idling/light rev to 3K once to see how it's doing. Motor is much more quiet on startup and now gets oil pressure on the key. I got a few other things to do tomorrow, then I'll drive it and see how it does. So far, much improved. I hope the repair holds up! I'll try to get some pics up tomorrow and explain some of the modifications I made to the oil system.
Originally Posted by Madjak
(Post 1446811)
It's the one thing I don't log but I have a good idea of where the temps sit. My set up is a little unique so it may or may not help. Whilst idling in the pits, I can only get the oil temp to 65 - 70 (149 - 159F) deg with the aid of a bit of heat soak from the previous run. At the end of the first warm up lap it gets to around 80 - 85 (175 - 185F) depending on how much time I spend warming the tyres vs engine revs and by the end of my first hot lap I'm generally up around the 100 (212F) mark then it will slowly rise to around 110 (230F) and sit there throughout the rest of the session. Really I don't get to see much oil temp rise until the engine is up past 6000 revs, then the heat builds more rapidly.
With my engine the block is grouted so it only sees a small amount of coolant running through it and I don't run oil squirters. This means all the heat load in the block needs to be handled by the oil cooler. I don't think it's massively different to other engines as most the heat in the oil is generated by oil shearing rather than heat from combustion. I also find my oil smells pretty fuelly from running E85 and I tend to get lots of water in my catch can especially at colder events. I definitely find when running E85 I need to change oil a lot more often. With the oil pressure, it doesn't really matter where you place the regulator, it's more where you measure the pressure to set it. So I have an 10AN line from the oil sandwich plate to the regulator (30cm), a return to the sump and then a line from the regulator to the oil cooler and one back to the sandwich plate. I run a Peterson oil pressure regulator which was around $200 from memory and it is super easy to adjust the pressure by winding out or in the adjustment bolt. It is a much larger diameter bore than the stock regulator and I was told that it helps stop pressure chattering at high revs (which also destroys the oil pump gear). So regardless where the regulator is located if you measure the pressure near the head or block and adjust to a target it works fine. Logs of my oil pressure pretty much sit dead flat throughout a session until the revs drop down towards idle and the relief is fully closed. Couple more questions if you don't mind. How much do you overfill the oil? Why do you run a 50W? Do you have any pics or info on how you did the grout in the block? Why did you do that? I think you're right about the accusump, I actually removed it now. I think you're right, before I was sucking air and loosing pressure at high revs, and while the accusump should have given it some oil to help out, there was still air being pumped into the system which of course is bad, so I'm gonna try to fix that problem if it exist. |
Originally Posted by patsmx5
(Post 1446822)
How much do you overfill the oil? Why do you run a 50W? Do you have any pics or info on how you did the grout in the block? Why did you do that?
I think you're right about the accusump, I actually removed it now. I think you're right, before I was sucking air and loosing pressure at high revs, and while the accusump should have given it some oil to help out, there was still air being pumped into the system which of course is bad, so I'm gonna try to fix that problem if it exist. Grouting the block helps reinforce the cylinders. This engine I purchased with it already done. Basically the grout runs from the bottom of the hole where the water pump inserts sloping upwards to the back of the block where it would be 1 inch from the deck. It's a dull grey epoxy material. The oil pressure dips under braking can only mean the pickup is sucking air which just can't occur in a high reving engine regardless of accusump or not. If you don't log oil pressures I'd set it up because it's very handy for figuring out these issues. I run a $20 Ebay 100PSI sensor and they are piece of cake to install and log on any aftermarket ecu. |
Originally Posted by Madjak
(Post 1446829)
I just fill up past the line a few mm... and make sure it is topped up throughout the day. I run 50W because that's what I have always run and what the MX5 race engine builders here recommend it but most are still a bit old school. I have some 10W40 to go in for the next oil change but then part of me says don't change anything because it is currently working.
Grouting the block helps reinforce the cylinders. This engine I purchased with it already done. Basically the grout runs from the bottom of the hole where the water pump inserts sloping upwards to the back of the block where it would be 1 inch from the deck. It's a dull grey epoxy material. The oil pressure dips under braking can only mean the pickup is sucking air which just can't occur in a high reving engine regardless of accusump or not. If you don't log oil pressures I'd set it up because it's very handy for figuring out these issues. I run a $20 Ebay 100PSI sensor and they are piece of cake to install and log on any aftermarket ecu. As a small update, I did let it warm up and then rev'd the engine up to about 7K a couple times, and thank god the vibration above 4K is now GONE! I was hoping the bearings were the cause, and they were. Now feels really smooth. Very happy about that. |
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