Opinions on piston lubrication during assembly

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Opinions on piston lubrication during assembly

Postby Belgian1979 » Sat May 05, 2012 12:05 pm

I have been trying to find out what the best way is about this. There seems to be a lot of opinions on this subject.

My previous engine scuffed the pistons during startup and I want to make sure this doesn't happen again.

Untill now there are people that say that you only lightly need to oil the pistons, walls and rings. Probably to have the seat fast. On the other hand reading D. Vizards book about rebuilding SBC, it says to really dip the piston in oil.

So what's the concensus here ?
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Re: Opinions on piston lubrication during assembly

Postby ClassicComp » Sat May 05, 2012 12:10 pm

2 squirts of oil on the walls & spread it with my finger.
Pistons are only lightly oilled
results speak for themselves
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Re: Opinions on piston lubrication during assembly

Postby Keith Morganstein » Sat May 05, 2012 12:13 pm

Belgian1979 wrote:I have been trying to find out what the best way is about this. There seems to be a lot of opinions on this subject.

My previous engine scuffed the pistons during startup and I want to make sure this doesn't happen again.

Untill now there are people that say that you only lightly need to oil the pistons, walls and rings. Probably to have the seat fast. On the other hand reading D. Vizards book about rebuilding SBC, it says to really dip the piston in oil.

So what's the concensus here ?


Yes, lots of opinions and recipes. A few drops of oil on the rings and skirts is enough lube.

Most scuff / damage on start-up is because of dirt. Everything needs to be very clean.
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Re: Opinions on piston lubrication during assembly

Postby PWMAX » Sat May 05, 2012 12:36 pm

Lightly wipe each cylinder with about a teaspoon of oil, then very lightly wipe a thin film on rigns, move them around a bit to distribute the oil around the rings, put a small dab of oil on each skirt, spread it around, and install. Just make sure you lube the wrist pin real good. DON'T use thick assembly lube on the rings, bores or skirts. Dipping the whole piston assembly into a bucket of oil is plain dumb and will make a huge mess, and is totaly a waste of oil.

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Re: Opinions on piston lubrication during assembly

Postby PWMAX » Sat May 05, 2012 12:37 pm

To add, a lot of the scuffing on the 1st start up, is usualy a case of not having the block filled with coolant. Make sure to circulate coolant thru the engine before start up. Just as important as priming the oil pump

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Re: Opinions on piston lubrication during assembly

Postby Belgian1979 » Sat May 05, 2012 12:49 pm

PWMAX wrote:To add, a lot of the scuffing on the 1st start up, is usualy a case of not having the block filled with coolant. Make sure to circulate coolant thru the engine before start up. Just as important as priming the oil pump

Frank


How do you do that ?
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Re: Opinions on piston lubrication during assembly

Postby Strange Magic » Sat May 05, 2012 2:42 pm

Scuffing a piston on start up?

Are you actually tearing teh engine back down after the first few minutes to come to this conclusion? You would have to, to make a bold statement as such.

Do not mis-interpet a piston to wall clearance being to tight with scuffing a piston on start up. When you actually think about that staement, it's kind of rediculous. The piston manufactures recommended clearances are usually to tight and without the proper block prep and the correct piston to wall clearance, you will score and tear at the skirts.
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Re: Opinions on piston lubrication during assembly

Postby Belgian1979 » Sat May 05, 2012 3:38 pm

Strange Magic wrote:Scuffing a piston on start up?

Are you actually tearing teh engine back down after the first few minutes to come to this conclusion? You would have to, to make a bold statement as such.

Do not mis-interpet a piston to wall clearance being to tight with scuffing a piston on start up. When you actually think about that staement, it's kind of rediculous. The piston manufactures recommended clearances are usually to tight and without the proper block prep and the correct piston to wall clearance, you will score and tear at the skirts.


Actually yes, the previous engine scuffed on start up. Still unclear about what was all involved. One factor was that the block was not plate honed and the boltholes were showing. Possible fuel wash, dirt, I don't know.

Want to make sure it's not cause by oiling.
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Re: Opinions on piston lubrication during assembly

Postby Strange Magic » Sat May 05, 2012 4:41 pm

I build engines with little to no oil on the pistons and have been doing it this way for years. I've never had an issue with scored skirts or tearing. If your cylinder walls are out of round in conjunction with being tight, you will have issues.
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Re: Opinions on piston lubrication during assembly

Postby panic » Sat May 05, 2012 5:11 pm

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Re: Opinions on piston lubrication during assembly

Postby af2 » Sat May 05, 2012 5:12 pm

Vaseline is all that I use when wiping down cylinders and when installing pistons.
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Re: Opinions on piston lubrication during assembly

Postby needforspeed66gt » Sat May 05, 2012 5:33 pm

Keith Morganstein wrote:
Yes, lots of opinions and recipes. A few drops of oil on the rings and skirts is enough lube.

Most scuff / damage on start-up is because of dirt. Everything needs to be very clean.


Yep - chamfer and deburr the bottoms of the cylinders really well, aggressively scrub the cylinder walls with multiple cleaners to remove abrasive material and metal grit, a trip through the jet wash is not enough.

I squirt a couple drops of oil into each of the top ring lands and rotate the rings around, this puts a light coat on them but does not flood the land. Same thing for the oil control ring. The skirt then gets a layer of oil wiped on it and the piston is pushed into a bore that was wiped with oil so it has a sheen, but is not dripping.
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Re: Opinions on piston lubrication during assembly

Postby Caprimaniac » Sat May 05, 2012 5:47 pm

Jeez. What Happened to my post?

I was gonna comment on the deburring! Done this mistake myself, although the pistons have survived well for 3 years or so.

And on the vaseline: The only lube you'll ever need....
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Re: Opinions on piston lubrication during assembly

Postby Blue Malibu » Sat May 05, 2012 10:15 pm

I have always used Marvel Mystery Oil.
Keep a spray bottle in the engine assembly room just for it.
It smells good too :D

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Re: Opinions on piston lubrication during assembly

Postby jed » Sun May 06, 2012 7:21 am

x2
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