Small block question. Anyone use the
#2715320
11/13/19 01:10 AM
11/13/19 01:10 AM
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Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 3,122 Auburn WA
Dave_J
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OP
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Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 3,122
Auburn WA
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Does any one use the 3.9 timing chain tensioner on their smallblock V8? I have two here. Redoing a 408 stroker with a 220ish @ 0.050 cam.
Retired, US ARMY 1973-1994 ASE mechanic, Electrical 1994-1997 Retired GTE/VERIZON/FRONTIER 1997-2015
Posting cheap tech help (CRAP) here since Nov 97, 1000's of posts, some may be good.
03 Suzuki Burgman 650(Burger King) Scooter 65 Formula S Cuda 78 Little Red Express Truck 98 Buick Regal (wifes car)
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Re: Small block question. Anyone use the
[Re: Dave_J]
#2715346
11/13/19 08:48 AM
11/13/19 08:48 AM
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Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 20,179 PA.
pittsburghracer
"Little"John
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"Little"John
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 20,179
PA.
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I’m race only but I would rather and do spend a little extra for a quality chain and never bother with them.
1970 Duster Edelbrock headed 408 5.984@112.52 422 Indy headed small block 5.982@112.56 mph 9.42@138.27
Livin and lovin life one day at a time
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Re: Small block question. Anyone use the
[Re: pittsburghracer]
#2715364
11/13/19 11:07 AM
11/13/19 11:07 AM
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Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 4,421 Michigan
MarkZ
Worthy
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Worthy
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 4,421
Michigan
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I ran one on my LA 360 for a number of years. No issues...
1987 Fifth Avenue - 512/518/D60
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Re: Small block question. Anyone use the
[Re: Dave_J]
#2715372
11/13/19 11:26 AM
11/13/19 11:26 AM
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Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 893 Tustin, CA
pishta
super stock
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super stock
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 893
Tustin, CA
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They work great. Some will say the double roller spines will gouge the teflon slippers though, I have not had that issue. Run a stronger 'silent' chain with the smooth back and they will get your timing rock solid. Getting a quality chain may not prevent it from sagging after 10k. Look at all of them after you remove the timing cover.
12 Grand Caravan 06 T&C 02 T&C 96 Breeze 65 Barracuda "S"
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Re: Small block question. Anyone use the
[Re: pishta]
#2715621
11/14/19 03:35 AM
11/14/19 03:35 AM
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Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 3,122 Auburn WA
Dave_J
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Auburn WA
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OK, I will be prep'ing one. I drilled a 3/32" hole in the right lifter gallery core plug right behind the cam retainer plate and will drill a bigger one in the tensioner so oil will feed the chain better. Ive done this on a few smallblock engines.
These Magnum blocks main bearing feeds are already drilled out bigger than the Herb McClandless spec's of 9/32".
they are 5/16" from the right lifter gallery feed down to the main bearings. And all but one of the oil holes from the oil pump mount up to the 90 degree over to the oil filter plate are drilled at 1/2 inch, BUT the return from the filter was only 7/16" and VERRRRY rough, looks like what is left over when a drill breaks off while boring. NASTY. I drilled it out to 1/2" and it is now a clean bore. I am using the Magnum 6 hole oil filter plate but drilled the 6 holes from 1/4" out to 13/32" , Just because I can.
My 5.9 Magnumn block has a Production date stamp of 24708 and "Hecho en Mexico" . I thought that the 5.9 stopped in 2003.
Retired, US ARMY 1973-1994 ASE mechanic, Electrical 1994-1997 Retired GTE/VERIZON/FRONTIER 1997-2015
Posting cheap tech help (CRAP) here since Nov 97, 1000's of posts, some may be good.
03 Suzuki Burgman 650(Burger King) Scooter 65 Formula S Cuda 78 Little Red Express Truck 98 Buick Regal (wifes car)
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Re: Small block question. Anyone use the
[Re: Dave_J]
#2718660
11/23/19 03:07 PM
11/23/19 03:07 PM
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Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 3,285 West Coast, USA
jbc426
master
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master
Joined: Mar 2007
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West Coast, USA
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I bought and ran that tensioner in my Magnum based 408. It seems to work well, but it is really just a chain guide. Once the side plates of the chain links cut through the nylon, the rollers roll down the nylon with little to no wear on the nylon block.
The best trick I've found to keep my timing chains tight is to soak them on their side in quality synthetic gear oil.
I stumbled across just how good of a break in lubricant that stuff is when I ran out of chainsaw bar & chain oil one time. I substituted Redline synthetic gear oil in my saw and the life of my chains more than quadrupled. It was nothing short of amazing.
Started soaking my timing chains in it, and it has virtually eliminated any chain stretch in half a dozen of my motors so far. The results are remarkable.I also use the highest quality timing sets available. .
1970 Plymouth 'Cuda #'s 440-6(block in storage)currently 493" 6 pack, Shaker, 5 speed Passon, 4.10's 1968 Plymouth Barracuda Convertible 408 Magnum EFI with 4 speed automatic overdrive, 3800 stall lock-up converter and 4.30's (closest thing to an automatic 5 speed going)
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Re: Small block question. Anyone use the
[Re: jbc426]
#2718663
11/23/19 03:09 PM
11/23/19 03:09 PM
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Joined: May 2019
Posts: 6,267 nowhere
Sniper
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master
Joined: May 2019
Posts: 6,267
nowhere
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I bought and ran one in my Magnum based 408. It seems to work well. The best trick i've found to keep my timing chains tight is to soak them on their side in quality synthetic gear oil.
I stumbled across just how good of a break in lubricant that stuff is when I ran out of chainsaw bar & chain oil one time. I substituted Redline synthetic gear oil in my saw and the life of my chains more than quadrupled. It was nothing short of amazing.
Started soaking my timing chains in it, and it has virtually eliminated any chain stretch in half a dozen of my motors so far. The results are remarkable.I also use the highest quality timing sets available. . That is probably the best advice I've seen regarding timing chain stretch
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Re: Small block question. Anyone use the
[Re: Sniper]
#2718758
11/23/19 10:42 PM
11/23/19 10:42 PM
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Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 22,696 Bitopia
jcc
If you can't dazzle em with diamonds..
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If you can't dazzle em with diamonds..
Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 22,696
Bitopia
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This makes me wonder, is a roller cam vs a FT easier on a timing chain and/or require less lubrication?
Reality check, that half the population is smarter then 50% of the people and it's a constantly contested fact.
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Re: Small block question. Anyone use the
[Re: Dave_J]
#2718914
11/24/19 03:52 PM
11/24/19 03:52 PM
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Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 3,122 Auburn WA
Dave_J
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Auburn WA
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Thanks for all the replies above. Wish we had a "LIKE" button on here. Since I am using a 5.9 magnum block and a roller cam that is a step above a 340 Resto cam it should not be adding a lot more force on the cam gear. With 410 ci (4.040 Bore and 4.0 Stroke) I picked a Luniti Voodoo roller 219/227 @0.050 and 0.549/0.565 @ 1.6:1 rockers. Should have a nice rumble out of the two STACK's of my LRT. The Edelbrock aluminum heads I got from Mancini are horrible right out of the box. Core shift on the exhaust ports makes it hard to gasket match but I was able to get them very close with just a little gasket sticking in the stream on 1 port on each head. Then the casting flash and boogers in the ports and the hardened valve seats have a huge step on the intakes that I had to blend down. And the oil drain back holes are small too. I am not doing a race port job on these, just a good cleaning of flash and boogers and a little blending in the pockets. The timing chain tensioner is like I said, drilled so oil pressure from the right lifter gallery can force feed oil to the chain. All the oil passages are larger than a stock LA smallblock and I am using a blueprinted Melling 572 High volume pump. After my first oil change I am adding a dual oil filter set up but one of the filters will be a restrictive flow 2 micron bypass filter that feeds back to the timing chain cover adding more "SUPER CLEAN" oil to the chain area.
Retired, US ARMY 1973-1994 ASE mechanic, Electrical 1994-1997 Retired GTE/VERIZON/FRONTIER 1997-2015
Posting cheap tech help (CRAP) here since Nov 97, 1000's of posts, some may be good.
03 Suzuki Burgman 650(Burger King) Scooter 65 Formula S Cuda 78 Little Red Express Truck 98 Buick Regal (wifes car)
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Re: Small block question. Anyone use the
[Re: Sniper]
#2719124
11/25/19 11:44 AM
11/25/19 11:44 AM
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Joined: Jun 2018
Posts: 350 Mequon, WI
gzig5
enthusiast
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enthusiast
Joined: Jun 2018
Posts: 350
Mequon, WI
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I bought and ran one in my Magnum based 408. It seems to work well. The best trick i've found to keep my timing chains tight is to soak them on their side in quality synthetic gear oil.
I stumbled across just how good of a break in lubricant that stuff is when I ran out of chainsaw bar & chain oil one time. I substituted Redline synthetic gear oil in my saw and the life of my chains more than quadrupled. It was nothing short of amazing.
Started soaking my timing chains in it, and it has virtually eliminated any chain stretch in half a dozen of my motors so far. The results are remarkable.I also use the highest quality timing sets available. . That is probably the best advice I've seen regarding timing chain stretch I'll concur that a pre-soak will extend chain life. My old company used modified double roller and silent chains for conveyance sections in the larger assembly machine. We did studies on different chains, material, and process and the pre-soak was a significant increase in usable chain life. Think how long it would take oil to make it's way into those roller as that chain is spinning around after a dry start on a new build. It's not running in a bath.
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Re: Small block question. Anyone use the
[Re: gzig5]
#2719207
11/25/19 03:23 PM
11/25/19 03:23 PM
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Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 1,442 NW Chicago suburban area
Mopar Mitch
pro stock
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pro stock
Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 1,442
NW Chicago suburban area
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I've just installed the tensioner on my new 410 sb, using a ProGear Hughes timing chain setup (that shouldn't make any difference). Looking at the front of the engine, I observed the lower left corner of the tensioner was making contact with the installed SLINGER PLATE! So, I carefully masked and ground away some extra clearance at the area ... using a Dremel tool and small grinder.. ground away about 1/8" from lower corner of the tensioner so that it clears the SLINGER... if it wasn't ground for the clearance, then the SLINGER would've been at a slight angle when the balancer would press against it... not good.
Last edited by Mopar Mitch; 11/25/19 03:27 PM.
Mopar Mitch
"Road racers and autocrossers go in deeper and come out harder!"... and rain never stops us from having fun with our cars... in fact, it makes us better drivers!
Check out MOPAR ACTION MAGAZINE, August 2006 issue for feature article and specs on my autocross T/A!
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Re: Small block question. Anyone use the
[Re: Mopar Mitch]
#2719230
11/25/19 04:48 PM
11/25/19 04:48 PM
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Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 3,122 Auburn WA
Dave_J
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Auburn WA
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This is all good information. Thanks y'all.
I use to take half a tube of 'White Lithium' assembly lube and mixed it 50/50 with 10W30 and painted parts and soaked the lifters and chain in it too. There a lot more assembly lubes out there today.
Retired, US ARMY 1973-1994 ASE mechanic, Electrical 1994-1997 Retired GTE/VERIZON/FRONTIER 1997-2015
Posting cheap tech help (CRAP) here since Nov 97, 1000's of posts, some may be good.
03 Suzuki Burgman 650(Burger King) Scooter 65 Formula S Cuda 78 Little Red Express Truck 98 Buick Regal (wifes car)
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