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MPFI Pistons.


Dirk
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Iv'e flicking around on the net and it looks as though MPFI pistons have indents in them. Is this a turbulence thing?

 

As far as I can tell an indent in the piston is going to lower compression ratio. Is that why you would have to skim the heads?

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Iv'e flicking around on the net and it looks as though MPFI pistons have indents in them. Is this a turbulence thing?

 

As far as I can tell an indent in the piston is going to lower compression ratio. Is that why you would have to skim the heads?

 

Turbo pistons (which are also MPFI engines) have indents - they are 7.7:1 ratio pistons. N/A pistons have valve cut-out's but are not "dished" like the turbo pistons.

 

GD

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Carbed engine is 9.0:1

 

SPFI/MPFI are 9.5:1

 

The difference is the pistons. They are taller above the wrist pin's.

 

GD

 

Rick, I still don't get it. My pistons come up flush with the engine block. If they were taller, they would hit the head.

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Yes - it's very small. I don't know the exact dimentional difference with EA82 carb vs. EA82 SPFI, but I know that EA71 pistons are about .008 - .010" taller than EA81 pistons and give a ratio increase from 8.7:1 to around 9.3:1 when combined with .020" off the heads. That was off some calculations I ran years ago when I built up an EA81.

 

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Sweet

 

Thanks man.

 

One more thing. Is it possible to calculate a compression ratio on an old engine that has had heads skimmed? I do not know how much was removed

 

Oh yeah, The blocks were skimmed too.

Edited by Dirk
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I think you answered your own question, you would first have to determine how much was removed from both by comparing dimensions with unmodified parts. Then it's simply a matter of mathematics to calculate the reduction in volume of the cylinder and the corresponding increase in compression resulting from it.

 

But can anyone here divine through the internet the inner workings of your particular engine... not so much. And actually that would scare the hell out of me if they could. :eek:

Edited by Txakura
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But can anyone here divine through the internet the inner workings of your particular engine... not so much. And actually that would scare the hell out of me if they could. :eek:

 

Ha ha. Let me put it this way: I am this 6th owner of this car and I'm pretty sure I'm not the only weekend mechanic to have had a go. The tell tale signs are all over.

 

Which reminds me. I met a man at the fuel station before christmas who told me he used to own the car and he re-built the engine! That makes two of us!

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