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Iskenderian roller cams for chevy 350
Iskenderian roller cams for chevy 350







“With a compacted graphite block and tool steel rings, the materials are very hard, so if the oil is too slippery, the rings won’t seat properly,” Cronquist said. “We still have a valvetrain with roller bearings that need protection as well, so the break-in oil features a high anti-wear formulation without friction modifiers to chemically assist the ring sealing. Mark Cronquist, Chief Engineer Builder at Joe Gibbs Racing, says the break-in oil has two jobs: protect the valvetrain and not hinder ring seal. The added slipperiness of these oils can prevent the rings from seating properlyĭriven BR break-in oil, for example, was formulated to help Joe Gibbs Racing with its engine program. Some break-in oils are designed to accelerate the break-in process, and as a result, these oils generate higher levels of wear metal-bad news for your roller bearings. Quite simply, not all break-in oils are the same. So what does this have to do with motor oil? In fact the “normal” wear metals for a new engine are up to four times higher than after a engine has finished breaking-in-hence the term “breaking-in.” An engine creates more particulate wear metal during break-in than at any other time. According to Timken, the number-one reason for premature roller bearing failure is particulate contamination. While the rings need to be seated in a roller, an oil that “wears-in” the rings will create a lot of fine metal particulate, and that particulate is a killer for your roller cam. By now, it’s common practice (or should be) to use break-in oil with ZDDP or a zinc additive for a flat-tappet camshaft.īut what about roller cams? Any old oil will work for that, right?Īccording top engine builders, ring manufacturers, and cam grinders, the answer is no.









Iskenderian roller cams for chevy 350