A bore gage is necessary to accurately measure the wear of engine cylinders.
First, determine the bore diameter you are trying to measure. in the case of the Cub, it is 2.625 to 2.627 (2 5/8") Set a micrometer to that dimension and lock the dial.
Install the correct length adapter on the gage so that you can 'set' the dial indicator on '0' which equals 2.625 inches. your eyes are not deceiving you, this example is using a 3.625 inch bore on a John Deere combine engine.
measure each cylinder at 90 degrees to the wrist pin in 3 places top, middle, and bottom of ring travel in the cylinder. Repeat the procedure measuring in the direction of the wrist pin. this is to indicate the amount of 'out of round' in the cylinders. This picture, although a little fuzzy, shows .005 on the gage. Remember we set '0' on the gage to be 3.625, so the gage is reading the wear of the cylinder from nominal.
You will ordinarily see the most wear at the top of the cylinder where the most thrust is. Most engine specifications will allow .005 to .008 wear before saying the cylinder is 'out of spec'.
Now comes the subjective part. Boring an engine involves completely tearing it down until the camshaft sits on the bench, freeze plugs and bearings removed, if any. It also involves about $350 at the shop and 4 new pistons. So the decision to bore is one that has to balance your needs for the engine and your pocketbook. Scoreing, rust pitting, and sand scouring (when the air cleaner does not get hooked up), all play a part in the decision to bore.
The choice is never easy. In addition, good running Cub motors are available. So if you don't need that casting code to match, $500 to $600 can buy you a nice running engine. Or a used 'long block' for half that.
This site uses cookies to maintain login information on FarmallCub.Com. Click the X in the banner upper right corner to close this notice. For more information on our privacy policy, visit this link: Privacy Policy
NEW REGISTERED MEMBERS: Be sure to check your SPAM/JUNK folders for the activation email.
How to measure engine cylinders
-
- Cub Pro
- Posts: 1871
- Joined: Sun Mar 30, 2003 10:25 am
- Zip Code: 06457
- eBay ID: cmtelephone
- Tractors Owned: Restored: 1950 Cub, 1950 Cub Demo, 1948 super AI, 1935 Silver King, 1946 Oliver 60 RC, John Deere M, 1950 C demo.
In working clothes:
1950 cub, 1948 cub, 1941 A, 1948 H, 1963 B414, 1958 240U, 1947 Oliver 60 industrial, Oliver 70 industrial. IH 450, 1963, another 1948 cub, 1946 I6 with Trogan front blade. - Location: CT, Middletown
How to measure engine cylinders
'If they're tappin', they're not burnin'
http://www.ZagrayFarmMuseum.org
http://www.ZagrayFarmMuseum.org
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
- 3
- 483
-
by Gary Dotson
Wed Jul 21, 2021 7:15 am
-
- 23
- 912
-
by RedFred
Wed Mar 15, 2023 8:19 pm
-
- 10
- 1833
-
by SONNY
Thu Jun 24, 2021 2:57 pm
-
- 4
- 372
-
by Don McCombs
Wed Nov 29, 2023 1:09 pm
-
-
140 Engine fit into 130?
by 1978cub » Fri Dec 03, 2021 9:34 am » in Farmall A, Super A, AV, 100, 130 & 140 - 9
- 660
-
by 1978cub
Wed Jan 05, 2022 7:25 pm
-
Return to “Engine, Clutch, Transmission and Hydraulics”
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests