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Thanks Jim for making it so clear and understandable.
Jean-Paul Quebec, Canada "RST Engineering" wrote in message ... "Steve Foley" wrote in message ... Yup. It's run out, No, it is not "run out" whatever you mean by that statement. It is still holding compression, not making metal, and does not have excessive oil consumption. and will need replacement/rebuilding shortly. Really? And what diameter was the crystal ball that you used to make this determination? I've seen engines that have been taken care of go DOUBLE TBO. I've seen abused engines go HALF TBO. It is strictly a function of the care and feeding of the engine. How should I approach this engine ( i.e. just assume everything over 1800 hours was a freebee and there is no guarantee it's not about to poop out Engines don't "poop out". Engines have a slow, steady slide into required serious maintenance. Every now and again, one will have an unforeseen catastrophic failure, but those are few and far between. The other side of that coin is that bearing/crankshaft wear tends to become exponential after a point in time when it departs from linear. That is, for a long time (extrapolated by the manufacturer to be "TBO") the wear on the bearings and the crank is linear. At some point when the bearings get to be sloppy on the crank, the wear accelerates, and the faster it accelerates, the faster it accelerates. If you want to play the crankshaft roulette game, you extend TBO until the bearings start to make metal. Then you pull the engine down, and if you are lucky, the bearings (the cheap part) took the hit and left the crank journals intact. If you lose, you grind the crank UNLESS somebody else played crankshaft roulette before you and the crank had already been ground to minimums. Now you REALLY have a rough row to hoe, in that you get to find a replacement crank ... which ain't cheap by anybody's standards. Jim |
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