No.2Diesel
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- Huntington, NY
Hi,
Its a Continental M330 made from 40's to 1966. The 227 was the one used in checker cabs. This is the only source I could find on the net after a short search but I'm sure there are more locally. I just have to play detective.
P A Ross Machinery Co.: Construction equipment and parts in Dallas, Texas
Citizen you make a very good point about the Chrysler 251; more plentiful and cheaper parts but 79cu. in. smaller and I'm not sure it would pull 1,800rpm at full load. I think I'll just save up to repair this motor properly instead of creating more of a headache. It really is a great durable motor.
-I put thin shim steel over the crankshaft journal oil holes and clamped it with two radiator hose clamps to prevent the obvious loss of oil pressure if not done. I even drilled the hex heads on the clamps so they can be wire-tied
Wrench Wench:
-The wrist pin is alot harder than the cast iron block and yes it doesn't have any abnormal wear on it.
-Its a valve in block flathead engine. There is no reason to make a custom cylinder head as this engine design was used due to manufacturing and maintenence simplicity. Performance of cylinder head flow and thermal efficiency is limited. Increasing compression ratio from the stock 6.5 to about 8.2 would help but thats about all that needs to be done.
Its a Continental M330 made from 40's to 1966. The 227 was the one used in checker cabs. This is the only source I could find on the net after a short search but I'm sure there are more locally. I just have to play detective.
P A Ross Machinery Co.: Construction equipment and parts in Dallas, Texas
Citizen you make a very good point about the Chrysler 251; more plentiful and cheaper parts but 79cu. in. smaller and I'm not sure it would pull 1,800rpm at full load. I think I'll just save up to repair this motor properly instead of creating more of a headache. It really is a great durable motor.
-I put thin shim steel over the crankshaft journal oil holes and clamped it with two radiator hose clamps to prevent the obvious loss of oil pressure if not done. I even drilled the hex heads on the clamps so they can be wire-tied
Wrench Wench:
-The wrist pin is alot harder than the cast iron block and yes it doesn't have any abnormal wear on it.
-Its a valve in block flathead engine. There is no reason to make a custom cylinder head as this engine design was used due to manufacturing and maintenence simplicity. Performance of cylinder head flow and thermal efficiency is limited. Increasing compression ratio from the stock 6.5 to about 8.2 would help but thats about all that needs to be done.