centaurus3200
New Member
exactly as tim said. i was going to post that your SS motor has a lot of miles on it with no problems.
there are differences though. the IC helps a lot with detonation, which hurts cranks as well as pistons and rings.
the main difference seems to be that you have nothing dragging on the crank with turbos. blowers are run off the crank and it's a fairly hefty load. especially for an engine with questionable oil pressure at low rpms, by design. that's what hurts rod bearings from my understanding.
see ya,
Robby
there are differences though. the IC helps a lot with detonation, which hurts cranks as well as pistons and rings.
the main difference seems to be that you have nothing dragging on the crank with turbos. blowers are run off the crank and it's a fairly hefty load. especially for an engine with questionable oil pressure at low rpms, by design. that's what hurts rod bearings from my understanding.
see ya,
Robby
Toolman said:Wow, just got back from vacation (and an abscence from the board) and 6 pages on this Roots. VERY SWEET. So cool to see alternative boosting methods. That car sounds very good. And for the price, very nice. Once you get some numbers and times from this car, a great argument could be made for SHO's and Bang for the buck (which is never the case with FI). Great poineer spirit. Very impressive.
As far as the rod bearing wear, I would not be too concerned. My turbo has 50k miles on its rod bearings, and I see boost much quicker than centrifugal guys. Not as quick as a Roots, but I still do not see rod bearing failure as a big concern. But it does warrant an inspection/replacement schedule on a much shorter interval than NA cars.
Hope you come to the indy convention. Would be very sweet to have four routes of FI there (SS-FPS, Powerdyne, Roots and turbo).
As far as the $400 layout, please help people understand that a cheap old SHO and $400 does not make a reliable powerful vehicle. Please never forget the maintenance and supporting modifications that will be necessary to harness this power for years of corvette-spanking performance and mouth-wide-open enjoyment.
Once again, congratulations.
I'll just stick to building my own 
may the gods watch over your brave, torque-craving soul sir!