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PostPosted: Tue Jan 06, 2015 1:52 pm 
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12-10-2007
Paul,
The end of the pan on the trans is on attached to anything that matters so it can wrap all it want and it won’t matter. The one rail on the other hand in a spot where welding would want to banana the whole trans just like I did to the block. Never weld more than you have to is a good rule I think. Charles did a great job jigging everything and it sounds like he got it all hot enough to do a full anneal in the jigs after welding and is appear to have worked out very well for him. I just prefer not to weld that much if I can avoid it.

I could make some jigs for the crank journals and the decks bolt everything down and sent the block out for anneal and probably jet it a bit straighter, but then it would be annealed and I don’t really want that. Ihave never had any luck trying to seal surfaces that spring into place like I would get bolting straight heads to a warped block. I think re-cutting is the way to go at this point.

It looks to me like the 330 heads will drop right on to the 400 block assuming the oil returns are in the same places, but an easy fix it they’re not….which is why an early block would not have made the TR head install any easier.


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 06, 2015 1:52 pm 
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12-10-2007
Pre and Post heat treatments are good no matter what metal you metal. The more pre-heat the closer the base metal is to the weld temp, so the less thermal expansion/contraction induced stresses there will be. Also the metal is much much weaker at high temperature so it will yield much more readily which also means lower final stresses.

Some metals like cast iron need to be hot-hot when you weld and cooled slowly or you get a pretty undesirable heat-treat conditions and often cracking. The biggest thing with aluminum is that is conducts so well you simply can’t get the weld zone hot enough to weld if the base part is not pre-heated.

In the case of my block, the best thing to do would be to send it out for re-hardening. That would get it hot enough to relieve any stresses and then get the base metal back up to original hardness. It still wouldn’t be prefect because the welding rod is not the same alloy as the base metal (welding with base metal alloy cranks every time unless you have the whole parts within 100-200F of the melting point) so there would still be stresses when it was done, but they would be somewhat lower and the base metal would be harder around the welds.

I’ve had really good luck with motorcycle cases and heads, brackets, and such doing them the way I did this engine. I’ll do the machining in a couple steps and that will let anything that is going to move do it now. I think it’s going to be just fine and I’m going to quit worrying and get on with getting it DONE!


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 06, 2015 1:54 pm 
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12-12-2007
Last night it was back to welding. I filled in the original oil return holes. Filed in the pin/oil feed hole that struck water-jacket and added lugs for what will be the new oil returns.


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 06, 2015 1:54 pm 
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12-13-2007
I got a little machining done last night and I’m now thinking it’s going to be smooth sailing from here on in and time to start planning the next phase…adapting to the trans.

I can’t imagine that with all the oil problems the 308 has to begin with that making the pan longer is going to help any. That said, I guess it’s probably dry sump time. I’m thinking use the original pressure pump and add a 2 or 3 stage scavenging pump.

I came across a company that sells a roots style pump and I have hard time resisting anything the even sounds like a supercharger. Aside from that, it’s lighter, more compact and pulls a higher crankcase vacuum than standard gear pumps. I might have to have one of these....I better find out how much they cost before I make plans though.....


http://www.daileyengineering.com/oilpumpmain.htm


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 06, 2015 1:55 pm 
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12-13-2007
Oil pumps are expensive....it looks like $715 for 2 stage, $1100 for 3, $1375 for 4

2 stage it will be I guess. They have them to spin in either direction so I can mount it along side the engine or sticking off the front.....hmmm I wonder what ebay has.....


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 06, 2015 1:56 pm 
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12-14-2007

"Originally Posted by davehelms View Post
Completely speachless, what an incredible effort!"

Thanks Dave.....clearly this wasn't one of my better ideas

"Quote:
Looks like a good candidate for Cooper Rings and O rings in place of a head gasket. It might help stabilize the entire package if the heads are hard bolted in place."

Dave

That is not a bad....I'll need to look into it.


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 06, 2015 1:57 pm 
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12-14-2007
I'm going as fast as I can, but it all takes time.

Here's what I did last night. I'm trying to finish up the one bank before I do the other side. I put the pin holes in that align the head and I mostly got the oil feed solved for this head I had to drill down in the corner of the head surface, then drill sideways through the end of the block without breaking out of the block or into the water-jacket on either hole and still get everything to intersect to form the oil passage. Now I feed to weld the hole shut where I drilled through the deck and the end of the block. I still don't have oil though because I couldn't intersect the original oil feed down in the block, I need 1 more cross-hole and I should strike oil. I'll drill that tonight……and this was the easy heads I think, on the other one the situation looks worse.

Tonight, after I hopefully strike oil, I’m going to new return holes into the lugs I welded on and carve out the water ports to match the heads. Then I pull it off the machine to do the welding, then back on the machine to clean the weld off the deck. Then on to the second head Saturday/Sunday I guess and hopefully start the timing cover Sunday/Monday. Hopefully by the time I get the timing cover sorted out, I think about 2 weeks) I'll have tracked down at least 1 348 cylinder so I can rough out the bore in the block. I'm hoping to be test fitting and on to the trans adapting over the holiday weekend.....it's a lot of work......


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 06, 2015 1:58 pm 
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12-14-2007
Paul,
I try to never keep track off the time on projects like this....Lana might find it them I'd owe her double the car hours

I'm taking pictures at every set, so in theory if I wanted to do it again I would know what I did... I can't imagine ever wanting to though......


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 06, 2015 1:59 pm 
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12-14-2007
I think they make a machine for protoyping like a CNC with a mig gun that could do just that layer by layer....that would be pretty cool.


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 06, 2015 2:00 pm 
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12-15-2007
"Quote:
Originally Posted by davehelms View Post
Not being able to visualize the interior of the TR heads, will one center oil drain back be enough being the heads are designed to be in a Boxer configuration? External drain back tubes are something we had to do on the 250 race engines using 1/2" aluminum tubes to aid the oil return. Using aluminum tubes and tube nuts allowed us to form the tubes to hug the block tight and made for a clean install.

External oil feeds to the heads might be an easy alternative as well. Do I remember feed ports on the filter housing of the 400 or was that only on the C4? A couple of restricted -3 lines if your well drilling proves difficult..
On the TR heads, the center exhaust flanges are nearly touching each other so there isn't room to run anything between them. That's why I decided to use 2 further apart where the flanges do allow something to fit. "

I though a lot about external lines and that would definitely be the easier approach. I decided to tough it out with internal lines though. I think once they are done they’ll be more robust and more OEM looking….I want to be able to tell people I’ve got the factory V12 option since all the parts I'm using were available in 84



"Quote:
I will have a look at the F50 manual on Monday to see what the liner protrusion is as I cant remember. The Cooper ring and O ring configuration on that engine is wonderful and provides a very stable platform with never a gasket leakage concern. The F50 had to do it due to the stressed block design using only one gasket in the entire engine and that was just a coolant cover. Looking at that engine would be a nice starting point while researching the thought. I might even have a couple of the old rings in a box as well for mock up thoughts, they might even be the right size for the 348 liners. Grooving the block and liner tops would be quite easy and you could use off the shelf Viton O rings for all coolant and oil returns and would surely limit the amount of movement once assembled."

Dave
I do like that idea. I thin the air cooled porsche and VW enginges had copper ring gaskets on the heads and about the right size bores. Now I wish I had the round 400 water ports back as orings sit much better in round groove. I guess I could buy cheap rule die and punch the right shape seals out od viton sheet material.......I need to give this a bit of thought.


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