Gunfreak25
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Looking at the FRONT of the truck, does your 6.2 rotate clockwise or counter clockwise. Again, this is looking at the FRONT/GRILL of the truck.
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I heard in Australia they turn the opposite direction.Pretty much all engines in vehicles will spin clockwise from that veiwpoint.
And the toilets swirl the wrong wayI heard in Australia they turn the opposite direction.
Exactly, I have seen twin marine engines where they turned opposite one another.6.2s were used in marine applications as well, wouldn't doubt if there were CCW 6.2s.
Exactly, I have seen twin marine engines where they turned opposite one another.
I had heard all this talk about clockwise this, counterclockwise that, reverse rotation water pumps, V belt rotation, serpentine rotation, etc. Nobody was saying which view they were looking at the motor from though. It finally dawned on me last night that the 6.2 does indeed have standard (clockwise) rotation as to 99% of GM style V8's (except as noted above, for marine use). As for the water pumps, they are reverse on the serpentine setups because the belt rides underneath the water pump pulley. Never thought about that until last night.Exactly, I have seen twin marine engines where they turned opposite one another.
Back to the OP. Out of curiosity, why do you ask? Which way does yours spin?
If things are timed right, I do not see why this would not work"only the crank turns backwards. They gear drive the cam so that the valvetrain AND OIL PUMP and distributor still turn the conventional direction."
This doesn't sound logical. If the cam rotation is reversed to the crank, it would never run, just crash all the valves into the pistons. You might want to review some basic engine principles there.
I've got a trailer full of engine cans with 6.2's in em. I've got one that's empty. I'll snap some pics of the mounts tonight after work.Would anyone have close up pictures of the military 6.2 crates? Specifically the front mounts that secure the motor. I'll be fabbing up my motor mounts to look just like them. Better yet, if I could find a crate to steal the mounts from, they would fit my frame with little work.
"only the crank turns backwards. They gear drive the cam so that the valvetrain AND OIL PUMP and distributor still turn the conventional direction."
This doesn't sound logical. If the cam rotation is reversed to the crank, it would never run, just crash all the valves into the pistons. You might want to review some basic engine principles there.
The Big Block Chevrolet marine engines I've worked on were a little different than what you described. In typical AUTOMOTIVE use, you have the small timing sprocket on the crank and the larger sprocket on the cam. The timing chain has them BOTH turning the same direction and the cam turns at half speed. In the marine version, the crank ONLY turns in reverse due to a single small crank gear and directly engages a single cam gear so that the reversely rotating crank drives the cam in the correct, standard direction.This is due to in a reverse rotation engine the cam is ground so when the cam rotates backwards the sequence of valves is correct so you have intake and then exhaust valves opening at the correct time. In other words, there is a left hand and a right hand rotation cam. The distributors rotate the same direction due to the cam gear either being cast so it picks up the distributor gear on the forward or the rearward side of the distributor gear. The oil pumps spin in the same direction. The firing orders are reversed. Standard would be 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2. Reverse would be 1-2-7-5-6-3-4-8. the cranks are the same.
Hasdrubal- You may want to do a basic engine review of your own before making a post negatively commenting as you had; especially when you're wrong. I forgot to mention that I was not speculating on design principles...I have physical hands on experience rebuilding reverse rotation Big Block Chevrolet engines and was stating absolute fact about their reverse rotation design."only the crank turns backwards. They gear drive the cam so that the valvetrain AND OIL PUMP and distributor still turn the conventional direction."
This doesn't sound logical. If the cam rotation is reversed to the crank, it would never run, just crash all the valves into the pistons. You might want to review some basic engine principles there.
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