mctim64 (1/8/2009)
Ted, I hope you don't think that I am trying to imply that there is no "benefit" to balancing, there is, all I was telling Paul is that if he is replacing one piston with a used one to try and save a little money and He gets the weight of the used one to match the rest in his engine He will be fine.Tim. Feel assured that I didn’t take it to mean that you are not in favor of balancing. I probably came across sounding like it has to be balanced or it will fall apart right away. In Paul’s case, he is to be commended for at least trying to minimize weight variances in the rods and pistons himself while knowing that he’s not in a position to rebalance the crankshaft at this time. This is much more than what happens on a majority of rebuilds and at least match weighing what he can will still help in the long run.
pcmenten (1/8/2009)
One of the rods looks a little different than the others - the balance pad on the big end was not milled down at all. I'm guessing that the previous rebuilder grabbed a replacement rod from inventory and didn't worry about balance. I suspect that rod will be a tic heavy on the big end.Paul. Don’t be overly concerned about the differences in balance pads as a variance in balance pad heights within a given set is common. And it’s not unusual for the rod with the largest pad to actually be lighter than the heaviest in a set. This has to do with how the rod was initially laid out when the machine work was started and the distribution of the weight on the rest of the rod as a result. Let us know what you actually find on the rod weights in regards to pad height versus the weight and how much variance in grams you actually find from the lightest to the heaviest.
Hoosier Hurricane (1/8/2009)
I have heard somewhere that factories back in the '40s, '50s and 60's would weigh "representative" parts, balance a crank to those parts, then drill the next batch of cranks exactly the same as the sample. That means factory balance is iffy from the start. I doubt if the factories individually balanced each engine they manufactured.
John. I’ve been told the same scenario on the factory balancing of crankshafts in regards to hole drilling without actually balancing. Essentially, a rack of cranks would all be drilled the same based on a sample crankshaft that was actually balanced. I tend to see this on the 350 scrub engines as a majority of factory balance holes appear to be identical both in depth and location. In all the years I’ve been balancing stock engines, there’s only been a few (three come to mind) that actually would have been okay as delivered from the factory.
Maybe Dennis K. can chime in and give the real story on what at least happened at Ford in the balancing department during engine assembly.
Lorena, Texas (South of Waco)