4,6 rod length is 149,8 mmWhat are the dimensions of the 4.6 rod ?
4,0 rod length is 155,2 mm
Can´t recall the big end width, have to check when I get home
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Mike,kiwicar wrote:Hi Perry
I am with Ian on this one, to me it looks as if the block has failed around the base of the liner allowing the liner to move off line as the piston has gone past BDC. Unless you had hydrolock on the cylinder I can't see how else you would get enough force to put that S bend in the rod. . . you did do a propper job there. . .
It also comes back to my particular thing about the large bearing rover block, I am still convinced the larger bearings significantly weaken the block casting aroud the bottom of the cylinders.
Nascar engines make 850 plus bhp and use bearing sizes smaller than the 3.5/3.9 blocks and although they have engine failures they are at power levels highter than you are at.
I would surgest building an engine based around a 3.9 block, one with the cross bolt bosses, get a 1" thick girdle made up with intigrated caps that locate the walls of the block to the rest of the bottom end and drill it for cross bolts. Then get a 4.2 crank, a set of Nascar corrillo rods with the honda acura big end bearing size and off set grind the crank to fit (should give about 1/8" extra throw, and use chevy 305 forged pistons I think you will end up with about 4.4 or 4.5 litres (you could even go for a TVR 4.5 crank in small rover main bearing size and off set grind that) forget the cooling system, fill the block with block filler then stick some buick 300 heads on the top, you dont then have to worry about the 300 heads cooling passages as you dont have any water in it.
Or as Ian says build an engine around a wildcat bottom end. . .
Best regards
Mike
I asked Ian Blackett if he got the run on vid and he was in the photo booth downloading stuff so he missed itChrisJC wrote:Got a vid of the run in which this event occurred?
With regard to the 4.2 crank, I believe that Land Rover could break them in the stock 4.2l Range Rover engine on the dyno by running it at high speed & load. Perhaps why they went to the larger bearing size for the P38 engines.
Chris.
It was Tom...topcatcustom wrote:Shiit! Looks like the conrod has buckled under cylinder pressure with all your N20 and fatigued on compression then snapped at the start of the intake stroke, time to find some H beam rods I think Perry!
Dare I ask- if that is/was your brand new top hatted block...?