This is from a different thread. I bought an old Snogo snowblower with a 1200 cubic inch engine to run the blower. It was made by Climax Engineering out of Clinton Iowa. Some one ran the thing out of oil so 2 rod bearings went bad. The thing is that they are babbitt bearings. Apparently before abut 1940 most engine bearings were babbitt.
Babbitt metal, also called white metal,
* 90% tin 10% copper
* 89% tin 7% antimony 4% copper
* 80% lead 15% antimony 5% tin
These bearings are pored hot. Here is a link on poring babbitt bearings.
http://www.geocities.com/baja/canyon/4192/Gray/babbitt/babbitt.html
The nice thing about babbitt bearings is that the mettle is so soft that it does not cause major journal damage to the crank when it goes bad. It just melts. (That is assuming you stop the engine before it bangs to hard.) It is more subseptable to damage when low on lubrication. As I understand the new bearings use a thin layer of it on the surface because of its low friction.
Babbitt metal, also called white metal,
* 90% tin 10% copper
* 89% tin 7% antimony 4% copper
* 80% lead 15% antimony 5% tin
These bearings are pored hot. Here is a link on poring babbitt bearings.
http://www.geocities.com/baja/canyon/4192/Gray/babbitt/babbitt.html
The nice thing about babbitt bearings is that the mettle is so soft that it does not cause major journal damage to the crank when it goes bad. It just melts. (That is assuming you stop the engine before it bangs to hard.) It is more subseptable to damage when low on lubrication. As I understand the new bearings use a thin layer of it on the surface because of its low friction.
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