2-cycle ring installation
On Sep 11, 12:50*am, "Eisboch" wrote:
"Eisboch" wrote in message
...
"Calif Bill" wrote in message
om...
I think the only "aluminum" cylinder was the Chevy Vega.
I think you are correct.
Aluminum can be hard anodized however, resulting in a surface hardness on
the Rockwell scale very close to steel.
Eisboch
Further on this: *(I looked it up because I was curious) .....
The original Vega block was a cast aluminum alloy, called 390, that was
16-18% Silicon, 4-4.5% Copper and the rest, pure aluminum.
It had no cast iron cylinder liners. *The Si content increased wear
resistance by allowing primary crystals of Si to precipitate out of the
aluminum.
This was all part of a general industry driven evolution of the use of
aluminum as new alloys were developed and applications were being tried.
It's also one of the reasons I've never been a big GM fan. * It seems like
they, more so than the other manufacturers, have a history of experimenting
with things, like metallurgy in this case, using their customer's cars as
the guinea pig test beds.
In the case of the Vega, it certainly was a flop.
Eisboch- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Yeah, they public becomes the lab rat, and yes, gm was/is guilty.
when they put the steel liners in that vega engine, they made a good
engine... finally.
But it lasted about a year or so and got ditched because the pubic was
sick of their crap.
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