thanks for the responses. I'm planning on doing the clutch in the spring. I know it's recommended to pull the pan to change the carrier gasket. Is it necessary? I'd rather not have to pull it because my hoist will be in the way.
I will go get an oasis report if I can, I never heard of that.
Those bearings look pretty bad, I can't believe it was maintained and that still happened. I just have to say it, but i'm sure most people on here have no idea what abuse these engines can take. I more then abused my first sho, and it never missed a beat. Now I have respect and a little self control.
Here is my take on why the rod bearings in this car wear, now take this how you will as it is only my opinion and I have not really done much testing on this yet. Now this is all assuming it was a FULLY MAINTAINED CAR, obviously not changing oil, not letting the car warm up (even in summer time, yes remember 85 degrees is still pretty cold for an engine) before taking off will hurt the bearings even more. Also remember oil does not come to complete temperature as fast as you coolant does, so just because the coolant gauge is in the normal zone, does not mean its ok to hammer it just yet, this especially applies in the winter time.
Now for my possible bearing failure reasons:
1) The stock oil pump has a very low pressure at idle, so the rod bearings will probably see a little more wear then some cars. I know my mustang runs a good 40 psi at idle (whole different animal, but just to make my point) the sho runs less then 10psi IIRC.
2) This engine loves to rev and we all love to rev it, now as a basic lubrication law we normally want about 10psi of oil pressure per 1000 rpm. Our redline (before we all install chips and rev to 8k+) is 7k rpm, which means we should be making 70psi of oil pressure. Well the stock pump blows off at 60psi, so anything after 6k rpm is going to start to wear the bearings a little more then normal. Now the further and further up in the rpm range you go wear starts to go up exponentially, and remember oil pressure is still staying at 60psi. Oil is starting to get smashed out from between the crank and bearings and it is running metal on metal at insanely high rpm's and almost 100% of the time at WOT, aka highest load on the crank/bearings. Now I realize pressure is not equal to flow, because I know the sho has some pretty large oil galleys (I have had my fair share of these things apart) and flows very well, but I still feel this is a contributing factor.
3) The bearings are just plain to skinny and should have been wider to distribute the load, this may or may not be the case, just somethinh I'm throwing out there as I do no know much about how wide bearings have to be to work properly.
Those are the 2-3 main reasons aside from people not warming the car up, running the wrong types of oil, not changing oil etc. Now you may say well my other cars get the **** beat out of them and they're all fine. Well re-read my reasons, I bet most of your other cars have better idle oil pressure and don't rev to 8k rpm. I feel the largest part of this is oil pressure not being correct at high rpm, and at idle, I also do NOT feel that transmission type has anything to do with it, because I have seen just as many atx cars spin bearings as mtx's. I believe people feel mtx's spin bearings more because they hear of them more on this forum where more members own mtx's I took a few polls on these things a year or so ago to find out this information and that is what I base that statement on. So IMO the only real way to end the excessive bearing wear is to have an aftermarket oil pump installed that will have good pressure at idle and all rpm's. However for the price/fab work to make such a system, changing the bearings every 75k miles miles is probably cheaper/easier for most people
