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Author: Subject: Engine experts Please?
big_wasa

posted on 6/2/05 at 07:32 PM Reply With Quote
Engine experts Please?

Was well pleased with my zetec ,and the strip and inspection was going well untill it came to Number 1 piston(see photo)
the bore is not to bad but what will have caused this pitting and what are my choices/options?
I have seen this on 2 strokes but not on a 4 stroke?Your advise one and all please.

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mookaloid

posted on 6/2/05 at 07:46 PM Reply With Quote
are there any corresponding marks on the head?
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andylancaster3000

posted on 6/2/05 at 07:59 PM Reply With Quote
From the picture it looks as though it breathed a solid in bashed it about a bit then chucked it out, if this is the case you'll never find out exactly what it was for obvious reasons!!
I would doubt that it is damaged caused by detonation/preignition as i would imagine it would have happened to the other three too.

Andy

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gazza285

posted on 6/2/05 at 08:06 PM Reply With Quote
Looks like pre-ignition to me. Could be causes by the ignition system running advanced until the knock senser retards the spark a bit, hence why it's only on cylinder one. That sounded good didn't it? Or a dodgy injector/cable causing that cylinder to run weak.
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big_wasa

posted on 6/2/05 at 08:21 PM Reply With Quote
The head has the smallist of nicks in it so would doubt the ingress of metalic items as I have found in the past it will mark head and piston as it plays ping-pong.
So whats my options ? Do I rebuild (sounds expensive £350-£600 on burtons website for the pistons £150 ish worth of machining .So it could be easyer to scrap it and buy another motor? Have given it a polish the skirts and rings are ok so if I put it back together whats the reliability going to be like?

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big_wasa

posted on 6/2/05 at 08:30 PM Reply With Quote
forgot to mention will be changing induction to bike carbs the ignition to megajolt and the exhaust aswell so if it is pinking that should stop.
But will the motor last?

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rusty nuts

posted on 6/2/05 at 08:49 PM Reply With Quote
Could have been caused by a broken plug? looks like some sort of debris has been inside cylinder.
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britishtrident

posted on 6/2/05 at 09:16 PM Reply With Quote
I have seen very similar damage on a Lotus Twincam cause by the screw on termminal bullet of old type spark plugs dropped down the plug hole.

[Edited on 6/2/05 by britishtrident]

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zetec

posted on 6/2/05 at 09:33 PM Reply With Quote
Go and find another engine. For the cost of a gasket set and a few parts you should be able to pick up a good runner. I normally go to the bigger salvage yards as they have crashed damaged cars which you can hear running. I wouldn't even bother striping down, fit it and try it, if it's duff take it back (unlikely) it it's good thrash the living daylights out of it!
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NS Dev

posted on 6/2/05 at 09:38 PM Reply With Quote
I would say detonation, but without looking myself it's difficult to say precisely. Are the holes really "angular" like grains of salt or are they like "pits" in the surface.

If they are more pitted than anglar then almost certainly detonation. Also, if it were debris in the cylinder, it would usually be more uniform across the piston face, not in two small areas. Also the head would have corresponding damage in the same areas, as the debris must have bounced off it to hit the piston again!

If the head looks ok, and the bore is ok, you don't mind wasting a head gasket set then I would be tempted to tidy up the worst of the damage to the piston and stick it back together and try it! it'll certainly get you going as long as the bore is ok and the piston ring area is intact.

A complete "new" engine would be the real answer, cheaper then messing about with that one if you weren't happy running it as it is.

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omega 24 v6

posted on 6/2/05 at 09:41 PM Reply With Quote
Have seen similar to this on a diesel pug. It looks from your photos as though something solid has been in there however why is the marking confined to the 2 areas shown. Both areas are next to the water jacket holes is this just co-incident. Check for a crack in the bores in this area. Also look at the head gasket and head face. The prob one the pug i seen was a crack in the liner 1 inch long letting water into the bore. Sorry if this is a bit long winded.
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jollygreengiant

posted on 6/2/05 at 09:59 PM Reply With Quote
It is NOT foreign object ingress (too localised ). That leaves ignition/heat related. Proximity to water jacket could be a factor in conjuntion with AN injector fault (or wiring to AN injector), would neeed to see head gasket AND sparkplug to make a definative answer.

Enjoy.





Beware of the Goldfish in the tulip mines. The ONLY defence against them is smoking peanut butter sandwiches.

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Mark Allanson

posted on 6/2/05 at 10:09 PM Reply With Quote
I think the fact that No1 is steam cleaned and No2 is fully carbon blacked is a bit of a give away, and the damaged areas are at 180° and adjacent to the water galleries.





If you can keep you head, whilst all others around you are losing theirs, you are not fully aware of the situation

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big_wasa

posted on 6/2/05 at 10:29 PM Reply With Quote
Number 1 piston was the first I cleaned,it did look like the others. the piston is just sat in the block and not conected.And the damage should be side to side not front to back.It is in the same place as the flat spots on the head with the worst damage being on the inlet side.
Head gasket and block looks fine(looks more scored in photo than in the flesh?

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big_wasa

posted on 6/2/05 at 10:31 PM Reply With Quote
pic

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kaymar

posted on 6/2/05 at 10:45 PM Reply With Quote
could this not be from a previous cam belt failure?
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big_wasa

posted on 6/2/05 at 10:56 PM Reply With Quote
I had wondered about that .But not in my opinion .As the valves would hit the piston about 5-10 mm in from the damaged area.But its not far from the lowest point of the open valves
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Mark Allanson

posted on 6/2/05 at 10:59 PM Reply With Quote
Cam belt would possibly cause damage to No4 as well





If you can keep you head, whilst all others around you are losing theirs, you are not fully aware of the situation

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big_wasa

posted on 6/2/05 at 11:03 PM Reply With Quote
Would pre ignition not happen nearer the center of the piston in one place?not at the most opossite sides of the crown?

The carbon deposites where about the same as the other pistons and actually covered the damage sujesting that this had happened earlier in the engines life?

If I take the valves out would a foreign body have damaged the head/seat.

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DEAN C.

posted on 6/2/05 at 11:36 PM Reply With Quote
Having stripped quite a few engines I think Mark Allanson is closest.
The piston was obviously steamed or had been running hotter than the others.
I would ted to think this is more likely due to head gasket failure and the damage could be on either side because it is nearest to the valves as the combustion process flows in and out.
Other options are water ingress due to cracks ,not always the easiest things to see.
If the pistons are ok down the sides and in the ring areas then a bit of pitting on the top is not too critical,but i'd definately get the head pressure tested and skimmed.





Once I've finished a project why do I start another?

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DEAN C.

posted on 6/2/05 at 11:45 PM Reply With Quote
After looking at the photos again I think the engine has definately been run hot and if you look at the head photo doesn't the head gasket look to have been leaking from the waterway on left of the photo,it's hard to tell in pictures but there also seems to be far too much carbon and staining all over the head and block,if I was asked for an opinion professionally I would say it has been run low on water or very hot for a while.





Once I've finished a project why do I start another?

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bob

posted on 7/2/05 at 12:13 AM Reply With Quote
my 1600 zetec escort leaked water into number 1 ,i was told by the mechanic who fixed it that it was an inherant prob on the zetecs something to do with a plug between the water way leaking.

If that sheds any light on it.






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locogeoff

posted on 7/2/05 at 01:32 AM Reply With Quote
I have a piston in my BSA Bantam that looks a lot like that, I physically pinged a bit of a broken ring out of the crown. However the damage was far more widespread around the edge of the crown not localised as in your photo.

Geoff

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britishtrident

posted on 7/2/05 at 08:15 AM Reply With Quote
Detonation damage piston generally faill in the centre of the piston, while heat damage piston either suffer crown failure through burning or edge burn damage from the piston rings seizing --- this is neither. Water damaged pistons (due to water not being compressable) generally crack across the centre in line with the gudgeon pins.
Foreign object damage like this is very comon on engines with deeply recessed plugs.
Also look closely at the pictures the piston is not aligned in its normal working orientation -- the damage is exactly in line with 9 o'clock and 3 o'clock positions when viewed from the front or rear of the block --- this is exactly in line with the very small squish area of the combustion chamber -- exactly here foreign object damage occurs, the head damge is consistant with this.


[Edited on 7/2/05 by britishtrident]

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NS Dev

posted on 7/2/05 at 08:47 AM Reply With Quote
Detonation can be anywhere on the piston, it depends on the quench characteristics of the engine!!!!!!!!!

On the Zetec, as was said, the damage is lined up with the flats (quench bits) at the sides of the chamber.

If it was foreign object, it would have done exactly the same to the head in the same area, which it hasn't!

I would say heat/detonation, both will do the same anyway, it's chicken and egg with these anyway, until the heat seizes the piston in the bore, which again hasn't happened. (unless there are pick-up marks on the piston)

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