Thread: What caused my melted piston?
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10-27-2009 07:05 AMGetting bad advice is unfortunate, taking bad advice is a Serious matter!!
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10-27-2009 07:11 AMLast edited by Tomas Wallin; 10-27-2009 at 07:17 AM.
28 F1 Pantera - Sit down and foot throttle | DPM Drive
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10-27-2009 07:14 AMLast edited by Tomas Wallin; 10-27-2009 at 07:19 AM.
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10-27-2009 07:19 AM
If the leakdown was at Cold 2-6 how do you think the Rings had any movement left while heated..
I mean on Audi WTCC racecars we had up to 20% leakdowns cold also the same with Turbocharged experimentals and Audi Sports head boss from Ingolstadt at the time told not to worry about that as they will seal up while getting warm especially charged engines and they did up to your numbers.
I never do a leakdown cold... just doesnīt make sense IMO.
As a machinist by profession I think I know something.
Tomas you still work for Scania..I think you could get some inhouse help?
But How was the Head gaskets?Last edited by MikeyFIN; 10-27-2009 at 07:26 AM.
Offshore Racing wasnīt designed to be a spectator sport, it's for people or companies with's lots of money to push the envelope of endurance technology and hopefully put a trophy on a mantle. It's man vs the elements, not like boats with like engines running in circles.
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10-27-2009 07:41 AMThe low leak down is because of the gapless rings, the ring gaps are where they're supposed to be on the plus side. I ran one season with them and everything worked great, the leakdown was the same when new.
No, I quit there a year ago, couldn't find much inhouse help there anyway.
The head gasket looked like this:Last edited by Tomas Wallin; 10-27-2009 at 07:50 AM.
28 F1 Pantera - Sit down and foot throttle | DPM Drive
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10-27-2009 07:51 AM
On blown engines I donīt like gapless rings (because of the heat variations running I like to have things a little on the loose side so I donīt need to worry ) or MLS gaskets but thatīs just me.
OK so you had no problems before, hmmmm ???
Howabout a water cooling problem on the head, the right side runs warmer and the middle ones seems to have gotten some coolant problems ?
Strange is what it is... but the more I think the more it seems like oil in the combustion or cooling problem which could lead to detonation problems. The cylinders are perfect so the water is at least up to there.
The 1-2 oīclock position looks a bit doubtful but detonation will do that quick, hard to see without a mag.glass..Offshore Racing wasnīt designed to be a spectator sport, it's for people or companies with's lots of money to push the envelope of endurance technology and hopefully put a trophy on a mantle. It's man vs the elements, not like boats with like engines running in circles.
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10-27-2009 08:07 AM
Was there a ring land failure at the top piston ring?
If yes thats where the 7-8 oīclock meltdown started because of slight oil in the combustion.
Doesnīt need much to lower the octane of the combustion mix to a mess and when you have the spark there also voilá we have a dish served...
My theory is that the head for a while run dry and heated which lead to oil ( rings butting because of too much heat ) in the combustion and from thereone the spark functioned as a small torch for a millisecond.
What do you think ?Offshore Racing wasnīt designed to be a spectator sport, it's for people or companies with's lots of money to push the envelope of endurance technology and hopefully put a trophy on a mantle. It's man vs the elements, not like boats with like engines running in circles.
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10-27-2009 08:14 AMThe head ran dry of water or fuel?
How would I know if the ring land failed? The piston got pretty warm since it began to sink just between the piston center and 7-8 o'clock. But what happened first? If it sinks I bet the ring land will break pretty soon as well?
Then the oil started getting in and it detonated to hell28 F1 Pantera - Sit down and foot throttle | DPM Drive
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10-27-2009 08:30 AM
Of water... as you have a Carb engine.
Offtopic
My team boss ignored the same thing on our formula ford rollout in the british series last year and lost 5 engines because of that.
I wanted to check the water was flowing immidately while the kid was coming back to the pit gate just to look into problems and leaks but Dad thought otherwise...
Kid told me next year dad ainīt coming along at all... or he doesnīt race.
In Karting I never did forget the water checks (couldnīt afford it)... on a boat with Raw water cooling I like to see a good flow too and Daredevil too...thats one of the reasons why he runs dry...
Right Scotty !!!?
Back on track.
Check the inside of the piston..do you see fractures along the top compression ring groove.
When things heat up it doesnīt necessarily break because it goes soft but youīll see fractures or something.
If the ring land is intact the compression rings just got too much heat and butted and gave a mix of air and oil to let the spark plug be a torch.
Thatīs my (long) shot theory.Offshore Racing wasnīt designed to be a spectator sport, it's for people or companies with's lots of money to push the envelope of endurance technology and hopefully put a trophy on a mantle. It's man vs the elements, not like boats with like engines running in circles.
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10-27-2009 08:41 AMA loose plug would lose a portion of it's heat sinking capability, but I would think the ground would melt away quickly and the plug would stop firing.
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10-27-2009 08:54 AM
Chris I agree with you, a Loose plug would just die.
Offshore Racing wasnīt designed to be a spectator sport, it's for people or companies with's lots of money to push the envelope of endurance technology and hopefully put a trophy on a mantle. It's man vs the elements, not like boats with like engines running in circles.
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10-27-2009 08:58 AMNote that in the article I posted it says "The engine will not run more than a few seconds with pre-ignition. " I think the plug got so hot that it became like a top fueler at the end of the track, the plugs are completely consumed and the engine is dieseling. Also with a good ignition system you would simply start scattering spark to the thread or head area, MSD or Crane can jump a spark over a 1/2" gap.
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10-27-2009 09:20 AM
But the MSD would not detonate and if it would diesel it wouldīve not shut down immidiately... it wouldīve kept dieseling until a hole in the piston
Offshore Racing wasnīt designed to be a spectator sport, it's for people or companies with's lots of money to push the envelope of endurance technology and hopefully put a trophy on a mantle. It's man vs the elements, not like boats with like engines running in circles.
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10-27-2009 09:33 AMThe compression was really bad when I turned it off since it smoked alot through the breathers and also through the oil pan gasket, with that bad comp I guess the dieseling would have stopped and only took place at high revs?
Would it be able to diesel on only one cylinder?28 F1 Pantera - Sit down and foot throttle | DPM Drive
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10-27-2009 09:48 AMHe pulled out of it.
Yes, absolutely, all you need is a heat source hot enough to ignite the A/F mixture. Most blower motors are on the edge of dieseling anyway so even a small change is enough to start a hot spot. As the piston burned away and it started to lose compression and use oil it probably ended the event.
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10-27-2009 09:56 AMLast edited by Tomas Wallin; 10-27-2009 at 10:14 AM.
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10-27-2009 10:16 AMOffshore Racing wasnīt designed to be a spectator sport, it's for people or companies with's lots of money to push the envelope of endurance technology and hopefully put a trophy on a mantle. It's man vs the elements, not like boats with like engines running in circles.