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IndustryArena Forum > MetalWorking > MetalWork Discussion > Align Honing or Align Boring ?
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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
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    290

    Align Honing or Align Boring ?

    Seems to be a controversial subject. Some books recommend align honing others favor align boring.

    jon

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
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    507
    Jon,
    I presume that i would go align boring when wear is a problem, but sometimes honing would be sufficient.... I'm no automotive engineer. Would you be so kind to elaborate on pros & cons of honing vs boring?

    Klox
    *** KloX ***
    I'm lazy, I'm only "sparking" when the EDM is running....

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Posts
    15
    I would seem to be inclinded to decide after determining the amount of ovality in the bores. If just a light skim-cut is needed, I'd probably go with a hone, if you have some serious ovality, probably be best to bore it.

    Just my 2 cents
    David

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Posts
    15
    Speaking of the bottom end, I live next to a race engine building shop. Known the owner for years, he builds high-dollar, high horsepower engines only. Very successful at what he does. They race a couple of cars of their own. At the track, I was helping spot him one day, and thought I was seeing things, watching the tach through the back window as he launched, he left the line at about 11,000 RPM!. This car has a 331 chevy in it. (327). I asked him how in the hell it stayed together.....he just grinned. A few weeks later I was helping him clean up the shop one day...noticed a 2-bolt chevy small block with some oddness going on on the main caps. He had machined the bottom of the main caps, and made blocks that added about 3/4-1" of material to the bottom of the main cap. The bolts had been replaced with studs, and there was a hand-made stud girdle laying beside of it. I asked him about it, he laughed, then said 'you have to do something to hold it together at 13,000. Ingenuity at work....hehe.
    David

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Posts
    84
    Boy would I like to see that! I work in a race shop where we make all kinds of high performance engines, including 2500 horse Pro Mod dragsters. My job is to design and make. The current project is a 500 cubic inch forged aluminium block for a supercharged alcohol Pro Mod, (no coolant).

    I have never seen a small block spin at over 10,000 and stay in one piece. We get 9500 in races regularly, but that's as far as we push. Perhaps your neighbor would be interested in licensing his technology? I smell an opportunity!!!!

    Let me know....

    Fish

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Posts
    290
    Originally posted by Klox
    Jon,
    I presume that i would go align boring when wear is a problem, but sometimes honing would be sufficient.... I'm no automotive engineer. Would you be so kind to elaborate on pros & cons of honing vs boring?

    Klox
    Hi Klox,

    I took sometime this afternoon to call and talk with BHJ
    Products who make tools and fixtures for automotive
    machinists. Because the subject of align boring and align
    honing is not properly covered in the five books I presently
    have on automotive engine machining, I felt I needed to do
    this. The books I own all deal with the small block Chevy V8.

    http://www.bhjinc.com

    What most people now do is align hone the main journals as a
    first step. In the past they use to align bore them. The
    problem is that most shops don't go the extra step and align
    bore and align hone the camshaft tunnel to make sure the
    camshaft tunnel is square and parallel with the mains. BHJ
    makes a very expensive fixture that does allow one to do
    this on a Bridgeport type mill.

    As far as your question goes, align honing allows, from what
    I read in Smokey Yunick's Power Secrets book, a higher crush
    on the bearings which in turn allows more heat to be carried
    away from the back of the bearing to the main webs of the
    cylinder block.

    I have been doing a tremendous amount of reading in order to
    really understand performance racing engines and it took
    a call to BHJ to realize that none of the books that I have
    give the subject adequate coverage. The books I have also
    do not have much to say about cam roller bearings, just cam babbitt bearings.

    jon

  7. #7
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Posts
    84
    Hey David,

    Another thought on the high revving small block. In my experience, revs on pushrod engines have always been limited by valve train more so than the bottom end. How does your next door guy deal with that?

    As far as align honing is concerned, it is usually performed to round out mains that have been beaten out of round. The object is to align the bore with the journals on the crank so that you don't have any high spots in the crankshaft and bearing contact faces. If you look at the main caps on a high performance engine, you'll notice that after time, the caps tend to deform along the cylinder axis, where the piston was at the bottom of it's travel. Makes sense right?

    Fish

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Posts
    507
    Jon,
    thanx for the info! As fish pointed out the bearing caps goes out of round along the cylinder axis (make sense to me!).
    If an engine is line bored/honed, is it necessary to go to standerd (?) oversized bearings? Do these bearings come in certain oversizes?
    On the canshaft issue, i know that some motor engineering firms does not want or know how to hone or bore the camshaft cavity.

    See you,

    Klox
    *** KloX ***
    I'm lazy, I'm only "sparking" when the EDM is running....

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Posts
    36
    I was an automotive machinist for 8 years and built quit a few performance and stock engines. Generaly the main caps are cut on the mating faces before boring or honing to make the bore smaller for resizing. On an engine that still has the original caps and not worn badly the only thing needed is honing. If the caps are replaced with aftermarket caps you must align bore before honing due to the additional material left in the new caps. As a general rule align honing is alot faster than boring and usually has a better finish. Align honing may take 30 minutes or so and align boring could take several hours depending on the amount of material to be removed.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Nov 2003
    Posts
    79
    As a related point to this discussion, Honda used (uses?) oval shaped cylinders in some of its motorcycles, cylinders with about half the diameter accross the cylinder as they do in the other direction...I'll see if I can find a pic

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Posts
    1
    ok here we go.

    I'm an Align Bore Machinist in canada i specialize in mining equipment.
    and really some ppl have been right, really it all come down to the variables
    -how bad are the bores
    if they are out of round by more then 0.010" then I would take a skim cut if not then hone
    -how much bigger would you like to go
    if you want to go bigger then 0.050" then I wouldcut (align bore)
    and as for finish well homming gives a better finish but when I cut {I always leave 0.002" to hone out so that the bore is perfect.

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