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just cant find a good ea81 core


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Figured Id share my EA81 teardown woes.

The first engine had 1 rusty pitted cyl. and it was a hydro lifter block.

The second must have had a pretty decent ping/detonation problem. Caused some nice scoring!

Can the hydro lifter block be used with solid lifters?

Im assuming the heads would work too if you change the rockers.

Enjoy the pics

-Sam

ea813.jpg

ea811.jpg

ea81case.jpg

ea81head.jpg

ea81piston.jpg

Edited by ihscout54
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Im not too sure how much you can bore if really any on these.

So the solid lifters work in the turbo/hydro block? Cause I have all the parts. The blocks are a bit different. Is it worth the trouble?

Thanks

 

 

yes, I'm running solid lifters in my hydro block. I think they need to be installed before the block halves go together though...

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What ever it was there was more than one because both cyls. on that side have this problem. Thats why I thought a detonation problem started it all once the piston started to crumble.... Who knows maybe the carb. fell apart.

How much can you bore these?

-Sam

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I may take them to a buddy at a machine shop when I go to Prescott for thanksgiving. He can get parts too, but I was hoping to, do this one on my own. Not only for cost savings but for the pride of building my own motor.

Hell I almost bought a CCR motor till the prices went up $600 because im sure its well worth it.

I think .020 is plenty. The hydro block has 3 cyls. that still show clean crosshatching but the No.1 is pretty rusted.

Where can I find the oversized components? Is there any internal things/parts I can do/use to improve durability, lifespan, performance etc. I saw the delta cams add here and many tips form air craft builders but I have found few suppliers for parts.

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You don't want to oversize the cylinders unless you have someone with a bore plate. These aren't chev 350's as much as they aren't swiss watches and one of the thing you MUST do on an all-aluminium split-block design is use a bore plate when boreing them out. The cylinder liners are cast into the aluminium and are prone to spinning if they aren't bored true - which they won't be unless you bore them with the block in it's stressed posistion (as if it were bolted to the head). The bore plate is about a 4" thick steel plate that has all the holes for the head studs as well as through-holes for boring the cylinders. Not easy to produce and not economical for a one-off. Better to ship it to someone like RAM and have them do it. They also sell oversized components IIRC.

 

Although if it were me I would just give it a rough and finish hone with my 1/2" drill and be done with it. As long as you don't do major boring you shouldn't have a problem. Don't use chrome rings - they will take 15,000 miles to seat and make any oil burning worse if you don't have a perfect finish. If you use plain sintered iron rings you should be fine. It will seal up and run in ok.

 

GD

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I havent tried to clean that rusty cyl up yet it may not really be pitted at all, but it sure looks bad. The hone I have has a busted stone maybe Ill remidy that today.

Anyone ever used the bottle brush hone with beads on it (flexi-hone?)?

-Sam

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