A friend of mine's SHO started knocking recently, and we figured that rod bearings were a good bet. There was no oil light, but this engine had spun a bearing before, 40k earlier. It was ground 0.030" under and matching rod bearings were used.
Well, when I got the girdle off, I immediately noticed a big frickin' crack through the crankshaft! This car is completely stock, and the engine was idling/under no load when the noise started.
As far as I'm concerned, crank grinding is a big mistake. Every incident of a broken SHO crank that I can think of involves a ground crank, especially all those failed stroker engines from Vadim.



It's not cracked into two pieces (yet!) as far as we can tell, just a nice thick crack, definitely not a hairline crack. We're not running the motor anymore, obviously the crank is garbage but the rest of the engine is still salvageable.
Might turn the car into a Lemons racer. This engine has blown up twice now, so we should be good through the competition maybe.
What's the easiest way to swap a crank? I was thinking that we could drop the tranny, take off the rear main and the oil pump housing, and do the swap in car. It's probably just easier to pull the engine and rebuild on a stand, right?
Sorry for crappy photos, all I had with me was my cellphone.
Well, when I got the girdle off, I immediately noticed a big frickin' crack through the crankshaft! This car is completely stock, and the engine was idling/under no load when the noise started.
As far as I'm concerned, crank grinding is a big mistake. Every incident of a broken SHO crank that I can think of involves a ground crank, especially all those failed stroker engines from Vadim.



It's not cracked into two pieces (yet!) as far as we can tell, just a nice thick crack, definitely not a hairline crack. We're not running the motor anymore, obviously the crank is garbage but the rest of the engine is still salvageable.
Might turn the car into a Lemons racer. This engine has blown up twice now, so we should be good through the competition maybe.
What's the easiest way to swap a crank? I was thinking that we could drop the tranny, take off the rear main and the oil pump housing, and do the swap in car. It's probably just easier to pull the engine and rebuild on a stand, right?
Sorry for crappy photos, all I had with me was my cellphone.
Last edited:
