Ratslaaf@OBDWorx said:I was being sarcastic referring to our fuel quality :rollsmile:
Good save... :=):
Ratslaaf@OBDWorx said:I was being sarcastic referring to our fuel quality :rollsmile:
There is a company called wearcheck. They do fuel analysis as well. Just as an FYI if you want to go that far in your researchRatslaaf@OBDWorx said:I was being sarcastic referring to our fuel quality :rollsmile:
Ratslaaf@OBDWorx said:Hehe I wouldn't use NF in the first place.
922-ZN said:Ratslaaf@OBDWorx said:Hehe I wouldn't use NF in the first place.
I know but the car feels SOOOOOOOO good on it
Ashlin said:922-ZN said:Ratslaaf@OBDWorx said:Hehe I wouldn't use NF in the first place.
I know but the car feels SOOOOOOOO good on it
Just like drugs i assume , feels so good but bad for you .:rollsmile:
Its not detonation. At all.Ratslaaf@OBDWorx said:M3_FTW said:Go with WPC treated bearings. Thats what I am doing and there seems to be the same consensus on the US forums.
I've given this a looooot of thought and spoken to many local experts in this regard. Including a few BMW Master techs that rebuild these motors locally.
Obviously opinions differ here, but what struck me is what a few people said: the bearings aren't supposed to touch the crank. Just dwell on that for a minute before reading on...
Did you think about it? Think a little more...
Now that you've given it some thought, I ask this: ideally, does the coating on the bearing matter given that it's not supposed to touch the crank? We all know that they do touch the crank however. The pictures above prove this.
Are clearances the issue? Well if it was, why are only the top shells overly worn but the bottom ones only show some slight wear?
My feeling on the matter is that it's all great going for harder bearings, but what happens to the crank now should the harder bearings come in contact with it?
I feel that harder bearings is a band aid solution. I'd rather determine the cause of this and there's many guys out there that lean towards pre detonation as the cause due to bad fuel.
We all know our fuel is bad. We also know that U.S. Failures are more to the South, where fuel quality is also an issue. I don't know how much any of you had spent time researching this issue, but in the research I've done I've not found any issues with these cars in the UK or Europe. And if there was an issue, I must have missed it?
So, based on what I've researched, I also drew the conclusion that this is more fuel related than anything else. Of course, I urge those of you interested to do your own research.
The next step for me is to empirically study this once my car is together to test the theory. These engines don't have knock sensors in the traditional sense, but I can test knocking by seeing how timing is pulled back under WOT. I can also test a few fuel additives and compare timing retardation using these.
That's the plan, so I think there's a lot of fun to be had going forward in testing this scientifically. I'm pretty sure this hasn't been done locally, and if it has it's not in public domain...
922-ZN said:Ratslaaf@OBDWorx said:Hehe I wouldn't use NF in the first place.
I know but the car feels SOOOOOOOO good on it
Ratslaaf@OBDWorx said:@M3, thanks for that!
I'm not excluding anything at the moment to be honest. There's so many varied opinions on the matter it's crazy!
moranor@axis said:can you take pics of the inside of the sump Im trying to get ideas to baffle my sump and it would be great to see what BMW did for this