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#3 (permalink) | |
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#4 (permalink) |
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You should not be holding the car at a certain rpm. You are not introducing ANY load on the motor becuase you aren't moving and you don't have wind resistance. Dynos simulate resistance, the reving the motor in neutral does nothing except harm the motor.
The rest I agree, except you should change the oil at 20 miles. You can seat the piston rings without going above 65 MPH. Run through each gear and hit redline. Then engine break your way down and do the same thing. Last edited by achapman; 08-10-2007 at 05:36 PM. |
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#5 (permalink) |
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Uhmm, correct me if im woring but changin the oil that eraly would affect your engine break-in period pretty bad. My friend works at the DB Honda and he's the cheif mechanic or whatever they them these days and he specifically told me it was a very, very bad idea to change ioil to syntheitc right away becuase of brake oil in our engine valves or something like that... Ill ask him again. But yeah he told me especially for the K20's if you change oil that early and switch to pure synth, your mielage will drop dramatically for a new car and you won't get the proper compression ratio your engine is designed for.
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#7 (permalink) |
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www.yospeed.com
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I foresee an interesting debate in the near future...
I think we can all agree on the small metal bits thing. About the redlining a couple times to get the rings seated... should we only do this once? Most of the break-in threads suggest staying away from ivtec/redline during the first 500-600 miles. |
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#8 (permalink) |
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They say that becuase thats what the manual suggests. However the manual suggests that so you don't do burnouts out of the dealer parking lot after picking up the car, or try to race everyone and get in a wreck then try to sue the dealer.
You should basically run the piss out of the car for the 1st 20 miles. You should not even start the car until you are ready to drive 20 hard miles. YOU MUST LET THE ENGINE WARM UP ALL THE WAY. This means so the timp gauge is in the middle! What you are doing is seating the piston rings so they seal better and hold compression (obviously). Then change the oil. I then vary the rpms until 150 miles and change the oil again. Same thing again at 600 miles and change the oil. Then same thing util 1500 miles then change to Full syn. Again this is my method and of course this topic is highly debatable with everyones biased opinions. Last edited by achapman; 08-10-2007 at 05:09 PM. |
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#9 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Edmonton, AB, Canada
Age: 22
Posts: 303
Scott Varnhagen
iTrader: 0 / 0%
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Well, this is going to seem like a flame, but I am tired of the blind leading the blind.
These are KingMarineM16a4's OPINIONS, and they happen to completely contradict my opinions. #1 revving an engine with no load is asking for trouble #2 changing your oil right away and too often gets rid of too much friction, which does not allow your engine to properly "wear in." #3 you should NOT hold the engine at a specific rpm on purpose I would like to see some proof that what I am saying is wrong, and what KingMarineM16a4 has said is correct, because his method seems so arbitrary and ridiculous. |
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#10 (permalink) |
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I agree with you on holding the engine at a certain RPM and not underload is extremely bad for the motor.. When you just rev the motor, the rings are just going along for the ride. A small portion of the ring is actually hitting the cylinder wall. Then the parts that do hit the wall wear down the roughness of the honing pattern. You want the entire ring to do this, not just parts.
Cooldown is only needed on the Dyno, not on the street due to the amount of air entering the radiator. |
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#12 (permalink) | |
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#13 (permalink) | |
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#14 (permalink) |
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Well from what I have described as how I break a motor in, yes I have torn down two race bikes. Both mine, and one was broken in the way I do, and the other was broken in by the book. The one broken in by the book produced less power and clearly the rings had not set in completely like the other. You could see the discoloration on the top of the pistons.
Granted I didn't have a control subject, but that is as best I can do. |
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#15 (permalink) | |
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Like we say at LTI, "Don't fight the theory." A lot of cars is theory, and if you fight it all day you'll never get anything accomplished. |
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#17 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Edmonton, AB, Canada
Age: 22
Posts: 303
Scott Varnhagen
iTrader: 0 / 0%
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Sounds pretty good. I don't think anybody who did an easy break in need worry though. Your car has hit the dyno pretty hard before it rolled out of the factory.
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#18 (permalink) | |
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#19 (permalink) |
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Why is everyone so gung ho to completely disregard dealer recommended break in instructions? Is there any evidence in the original post that indicates this process actually works, aside from the fact that this information also exists on some other websites? The engine has already been "introduced to vtec" back at the factory, no? What the hell is this guy talking about
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#20 (permalink) | |
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sorry for the long post...
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now it's time to speak on the engine break-in theory... idk what the book says seeing as i never read it b4... all i've done was go off of experience... and that experience has lead me to believe that a hard break-in always works better... for example... i actually didn't drive my car hard, never touching 4k rpms for the first 80 miles... after that i hit the limiter shift, limiter shift, limiter shift... u get the idea... and going by my dyno numbers compared to other stock Si numbers i would say the way i broke it in works best... my very first dyno was 3000 miles after i bought the car... first run was 190.4hp/145.x tq... my best was with my filter off and a 5-10 min cool down... which yielded 199.0hp/151tq... now i didn't believe it when i saw it... but then two other Si's dyno'd right after me... one of them w/mods did 200hp and the other w/more mods did 201hp... everyone was like WTF did i do to make my car have such high hp compared to the others... i said i just... then i explained what i did... these numbers were always debated b/c let's face it no other stock Si dyno'd that much b4... now let's FF>> to a few months ago... over one year and 19k miles later since my first dyno... put the car on the dyno @ P2R shop... the numbers again said 190.9hp/144.4tq this is still completely stock now... like 2 days l8r we had a Si dyno day (with very similar HOT S.FL weather) and i think the other stock Si's dyno'd 185hp/135tq and a few Si's w/mods were in the range of about 194hp-204hp... now their mods range from the lowest one with I/IMG/E to I/IMG/H/E/Reflash... i added the P2R spacer and i got 195.4hp/146tq... these are all SAE corrected numbers... my non corrected number was like 206hp+... maybe i have freak if you believe in that stuff or maybe the way i broke it in worked better for my engine... idk... it's ultimately up to you on how u prefer ur engine to perform... side note... all my dyno's showed an A/F mixture of about 10.5-11 while in so i know with proper tuning my car will see over 200hp w/o any serious mods... |
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| Introduction & Pictures - Page 41 - 8th Generation Honda Civic Forum | This thread | Refback | 02-20-2008 05:13 PM | |
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