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JAXAshby wrote:
dave, nice explanation of how an oil pump would fail to provide any oil at all, let alone pressure oil, to even the first bearing in line upon engine startup. think of the grinding, clashing, rubbing, clattering you would hear on the bearing for a minute or two or five. Thus the old practice of chucking a rod with appropriate gear on the end in a drill motor, pulling the distributor, and spinning up the oil pump on older engines after a rebuild. A bit out of my field, but I believe most of the noise I have encountered with engines at startup (at least those that haven't been sitting too long) is top end noise (vice more expensive bottom end issues) and usually associated with hydraulic lifters pumping up vice bearing issues. Recall that there is a fair amount of oil retention in the bearings for extended periods of time, and the separation of the journal from the bearing on oil during operation is based on pressure developed by the rotating journal, not the oil pump. I believe the pump sustains the quantity of oil and therefore only indirectly the thickness of the oil wedge supporting the journal. My college machine design notes and textbooks are in the basement and I don't really want to go dig them out, but I believe my recollection is accurate. dave -- ----- news_bucket e-mail address goes to a blackhole. Sorry. Send e-mail to "respond" at the same domain. |
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