Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

On 6/9/2022 at 1:41 PM, cyman said:

 

thank you for the prompt and comprehensive answers and solutions to my problem. the real problem is that this is a custom crankshaft(builder no longer offer it) made from a famous builder, in australia and then shipped to my country. so its a an rb26 stroker (2.9L) using an rb30 crankshaft. so first we have to remake the used crankshaft(i think the crankshaft is destroked and and with smaller counterweights). Machine shop will have to measure and  replicate the crankshaft.

in deed this rb storker was pushing like 900whp on an ati vibration dampener but we were unaware(naive) that the age of the dampener does matter(it was 10 years old when we first bought it, and used it as it seems to be good at the time of the build) also we used oem bolt and torque specs of that of an rb30. Buy the time we increased the power, soon enough we had this issue.

so to summarise it up, we need:

  • an aftermarket balancer that will have very tight fit like Ross,
  • after market timing gear like the Ross or RPR
  • Nitto keyways

Do you think that using ARP crankbolt is good to be used just to be on the safe side? 

thank you.

Correct mate. The timing shield/washers as another poster suggested is nothing to do with the issue.

Plenty of other cars run a similar setup with washers and have no dramas or issues.

The only issue is badly made tolerances on Nissans part. Get a properly made balancer, get the snout repaired/crank replicated and make sure the snout is perfect. Balancer should not be possible to put on by hand/hammer. Correct tension and interference requires a pusher tool- if you don't use one- the balancer is too loose.

No other cars use slip on balancers really- besides Nissan for whatever reason. That little tiny gap may be nothing at low RPM- but that gap at 7,8,9,10k RPM or higher than stock power and driving etc is going to move the balancer, loosen the bolt, and either mince the crank snout, wack out the keyways, or- as in my case, do both!

Hopefully you get it sorted :)

Micrometer the balancer and the snout always!

Edited by CLEM0
On 09/06/2022 at 3:38 PM, CLEM0 said:

Correct mate. The timing shield/washers as another poster suggested is nothing to do with the issue.

Plenty of other cars run a similar setup with washers and have no dramas or issues.

The only issue is badly made tolerances on Nissans part. Get a properly made balancer, get the snout repaired/crank replicated and make sure the snout is perfect. Balancer should not be possible to put on by hand/hammer. Correct tension and interference requires a pusher tool- if you don't use one- the balancer is too loose.

No other cars use slip on balancers really- besides Nissan for whatever reason. That little tiny gap may be nothing at low RPM- but that gap at 7,8,9,10k RPM or higher than stock power and driving etc is going to move the balancer, loosen the bolt, and either mince the crank snout, wack out the keyways, or- as in my case, do both!

Hopefully you get it sorted :)

Micrometer the balancer and the snout always!

No not correct at all regarding the shields. I suggest to go and have a talk to the guys at Ross as I have spoke at lengths with them over months about it. Sorry mate but the the factory washers and soft timing gear are THE biggest problem over the damper, It only takes a very small amount of compression on these back items and then no matter what damper you have it will work its way loose. The shields compress way before the any damper will as they are soft as shit, and is why they are listed as a not to be reused on disassembly item in the factory manual because they compress.

Even with balancer having an interference fit what do you think happens if the gear section and shields compress ? - the bolt comes loose. This is why Ross developed these only in the last 2 or so years as no one else picked up on it.

I personally destroyed a Ross damper keyway and bonding material on a 1000km old Ross balancer last year with a brand new factory RB26 bolt tensioned to around 470nm at over 800hp.

20210930_155942.thumb.jpg.3ee4e902177df7d79978cc768d137205.jpg

20210930_155935.thumb.jpg.0b1d787ae6e5de85a927b3c5fa327efd.jpg

They replaced it under warranty luckily and now the entire assembly does not have one factory component bolted to the crankshaft.

20211228_144326.thumb.jpg.d725420c9dd7b2edecfd3eb21e9cf017.jpg

20211228_144357.thumb.jpg.7fc2726ad86daa7d11cf8a2bdd2805f6.jpg

20211228_144348.thumb.jpg.08a6c230f6022ed7cb3d9b673709b545.jpg

20211228_144407.thumb.jpg.3155d054889ac843f03b64dc76261c2f.jpg

20220103_152551.thumb.jpg.28c364563cdf508d23eb11d14c03b451.jpg

20220103_152007.thumb.jpg.da368771b7009481947f9b8588e1b5d8.jpg

20220103_141027.thumb.jpg.981f42be54a4c3dcb0e79ce2c7efdf9a.jpg

  • Thanks 1
On 6/9/2022 at 3:14 PM, BK said:

No not correct at all regarding the shields. I suggest to go and have a talk to the guys at Ross as I have spoke at lengths with them over months about it. Sorry mate but the the factory washers and soft timing gear are THE biggest problem over the damper, It only takes a very small amount of compression on these back items and then no matter what damper you have it will work its way loose. The shields compress way before the any damper will as they are soft as shit, and is why they are listed as a not to be reused on disassembly item in the factory manual because they compress.

Even with balancer having an interference fit what do you think happens if the gear section and shields compress ? - the bolt comes loose. This is why Ross developed these only in the last 2 or so years as no one else picked up on it.

I personally destroyed a Ross damper keyway and bonding material on a 1000km old Ross balancer last year with a brand new factory RB26 bolt tensioned to around 470nm at over 800hp.

20210930_155942.thumb.jpg.3ee4e902177df7d79978cc768d137205.jpg

20210930_155935.thumb.jpg.0b1d787ae6e5de85a927b3c5fa327efd.jpg

They replaced it under warranty luckily and now the entire assembly does not have one factory component bolted to the crankshaft.

20211228_144326.thumb.jpg.d725420c9dd7b2edecfd3eb21e9cf017.jpg

20211228_144357.thumb.jpg.7fc2726ad86daa7d11cf8a2bdd2805f6.jpg

20211228_144348.thumb.jpg.08a6c230f6022ed7cb3d9b673709b545.jpg

20211228_144407.thumb.jpg.3155d054889ac843f03b64dc76261c2f.jpg

20220103_152551.thumb.jpg.28c364563cdf508d23eb11d14c03b451.jpg

20220103_152007.thumb.jpg.da368771b7009481947f9b8588e1b5d8.jpg

20220103_141027.thumb.jpg.981f42be54a4c3dcb0e79ce2c7efdf9a.jpg

My apologies- I stand corrected.

I'd assume the loose balancer from OEM + bad washers is the bigger picture then.

Potentially yours failed from high bolt torque compressing the washer beyond necessary?

I just found it hard to be true as many cars use similiar washer on crank systems and have no dramas- and the washer is very thin as is- before any compression. I personally have 1 PRP one OEM.

Thanks for the info. Always happy to know more.

Edited by CLEM0
On 09/06/2022 at 5:11 PM, CLEM0 said:

My apologies- I stand corrected.

I'd assume the loose balancer from OEM + bad washers is the bigger picture then.

Potentially yours failed from high bolt torque compressing the washer beyond necessary?

Thanks for the info. Always happy to know more.

Absolutely the correct RB26 tension at 450nm+ on the bolt makes the soft timing gear and washers / shield problem more pronounced, but at the end of the day the RBs all use the same lower timing gear arrangement.

On the white 32 RB26 we are doing the same setup right now after the blue car had this happen.

On 09/06/2022 at 5:46 PM, White GTS-T said:

Are people locking the flywheels when torquing these bolts up?

Or are they putting the vehicle in gear with the foot on the brake and putting all that torque through the clutch plate?

Yep I do. I use one of my old RB starter motors that's been cut in half and welded locked, so I bolt that in place and get to 460 - 470nm torque quite easily with the 3/4" tension wrench. Doesn't move a mm when doing it in car.

How's everyone else locking their flywheels ?

  • Like 1

I can't see any brakes holding anywhere near 400nm+ of torque. I did mine on the engine stand with the flywheel locked.
Look at the size of torque wrenches we are using to achieve that torque and go figure.

I personally can't see how an interference fit between the balancer and shaft would help, the clamping force comes from the bolt and areas that it compresses, the woodruff keys are there just to align timing marks for the cam pulley and balancer at TDC.

 

Edited by NZ-GTT
On 09/06/2022 at 6:16 PM, NZ-GTT said:

personally can't see how an interference fit between the balancer and shaft would help, the clamping force comes from the bolt and areas that it compresses, the woodruff keys are there just to align timing marks for the cam pulley and balancer at TDC.

You are absolutely correct - keys are for timing alignment only and tension is provided by the bolt.

Admittedly some tighter tolerances I guess help with stuff not flopping around as much. The Ross stuff definitely is tighter, as the lower timing gear and balancers do not go on just by hand like the factory stuff.

  • Thanks 1

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Next on the to-do list was an oil and filter change. Nothing exciting to add here except the oil filter is in a really stupid place (facing the engine mount/subframe/steering rack). GReddy do a relocation kit which puts it towards the gearbox, I would have preferred towards the front but there's obviously a lot more stuff there. Something I'll have to look at for the next service perhaps. First time using Valvoline oil, although I can't see it being any different to most other brands Nice... The oil filter location... At least the subframe wont rust any time soon I picked up a genuine fuel filter, this is part of the fuel pump assembly inside the fuel tank. Access can be found underneath the rear seat, you'll see this triangular cover Remove the 3x plastic 10mm nuts and lift the cover up, pushing the rubber grommet through The yellow fuel line clips push out in opposite directions, remove these completely. The two moulded fuel lines can now pull upwards to disconnect, along with the wire electrical plug. There's 8x 8mm bolts that secure the black retaining ring. The fuel pump assembly is now ready to lift out. Be mindful of the fuel hose on the side, the hose clamp on mine was catching the hose preventing it from lifting up The fuel pump/filter has an upper and lower section held on by 4 pressure clips. These did take a little bit of force, it sounded like the plastic tabs were going to break but they didn't (don't worry!) The lower section helps mount the fuel pump, there's a circular rubber gasket/grommet/seal thing on the bottom where the sock is. Undo the hose clip on the short fuel hose on the side to disconnect it from the 3 way distribution pipe to be able to lift the upper half away. Don't forget to unplug the fuel pump too! There's a few rubber O rings that will need transferring to the new filter housing, I show these in the video at the bottom of this write up. Reassembly is the reverse Here's a photo of the new filter installed, you'll be able to see where the tabs are more clearing against the yellow OEM plastic Once the assembly is re-installed, I turned the engine over a few times to help build up fuel pressure. I did panic when the car stopped turning over but I could hear the fuel pump making a noise. It eventually started and has been fine since. Found my 'lucky' coin underneath the rear seat too The Youtube video can be seen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uLJ65pmQt44&t=6s
    • It was picked up on the MOT/Inspection that the offside front wheel bearing had excessive play along with the ball joint. It made sense to do both sides so I sourced a pair of spare IS200 hubs to do the swap. Unfortunately I don't have any photos of the strip down but here's a quick run down. On the back of the hub is a large circular dust cover, using a flat head screw driver and a mallet I prised it off. Underneath will reveal a 32mm hub nut (impact gun recommended). With the hub nut removed the ABS ring can be removed (I ended up using a magnetic pick up tool to help). Next up is to remove the stub axle, this was a little trickier due to limited tools. I tried a 3 leg puller but the gap between the hub and stub axle wasn't enough for the legs to get in and under. Next option was a lump hammer and someone pulling the stub axle at the same time. After a few heavy hits it released. The lower bearing race had seized itself onto the stub axle, which was fine because I was replacing them anyway. With the upper bearing race removed and the grease cleaned off they looked like this The left one looked pristine inside but gave us the most trouble. The right one had some surface rust but came apart in a single hit, figure that out?! I got a local garage to press the new wheel bearings in, reassemble was the opposite and didn't take long at all. Removing the hub itself was simple. Starting with removing the brake caliper, 2x 14mm bolts for the caliper slider and 2x 19mm? for the carrier > hub bolts. I used a cable tie to secure the caliper to the upper arm so it was out of the way, there's a 10mm bolt securing the ABS sensor on. With the brake disc removed from the hub next are the three castle nuts for the upper and lower ball joints and track rod end. Two of these had their own R clip and one split pin. A few hits with the hammer and they're released (I left the castle nuts on by a couple of turns), the track rod ends gave me the most grief and I may have nipped the boots (oops). Fitting is the reversal and is very quick and easy to do. The lower ball joints are held onto the hub by 2x 17mm bolts. The castle nut did increase in socket size to 22mm from memory (this may vary from supplier) The two front tyres weren't in great condition, so I had those replaced with some budget tyres for the time being. I'll be replacing the wheels and tyres in the future, this was to get me on the road without the worry of the police hassling me.
    • Yep, the closest base tune available was for the GTT, I went with that and made all the logical changes I could find to convert it to Naturally Aspirated. It will rev fine in Neutral to redline but it will be cutting nearly 50% fuel the whole way.  If I let it tune the fuel map to start with that much less fuel it wont run right and has a hard time applying corrections.  These 50% cuts are with a fuel map already about half of what the GTT tune had.  I was having a whole lot of bogging when applying any throttle but seem to have fixed that for no load situations with very aggressive transient throttle settings. I made the corrections to my injectors with data I found for them online, FBCJC100 flowing 306cc.  I'll have to look to see if I can find the Cam section. I have the Bosch 4.9 from Haltech. My manifold pressure when watching it live is always in -5.9 psi/inHg
    • Hi My Tokico BM50 Brake master cylinder has a leak from the hole between the two outlets (M10x1) for brake pipes, I have attached a photo. Can anyone tell me what that hole is and what has failed to allow brake fluid to escape from it, I have looked on line and asked questions on UK forums but can not find the answer, if anyone can enlighten me I would be most grateful.
    • It will be a software setting. I don't believe many on here ever used AEM. And they're now a discontinued product,that's really hard to find any easy answers on. If it were Link or Haltech, someone would be able to just send you a ECU file though.
×
×
  • Create New...