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Engine Honing


schri00
01-30-2010, 03:42 PM
Hi everyone, I'm new here.

On a freshly bored engine, there are three stages to honing. My question is: for how long do you have to hone each cylinder during each of the three stages. I'm not doing this work myself, but would like to have an idea.

Any advice would be appreciated. Thanks.

RahX
01-30-2010, 03:47 PM
It is relative to the experience and equipment. A good honing machine won't take that long. They should be able to hone out a block in a few hours.

schri00
01-30-2010, 03:55 PM
Hi RahX, thanks for answering. I forgot to mention they will be doing the job manually, using an electric drill. Problem is, if they hone the cylinder longer than they should, during any of the three stages, they will take too much material off the cylinder wall. So I would like to have an approximate figure of time or visual indication to go by. Thanks.

MagicRat
01-30-2010, 03:56 PM
If you are using 3 different grades of hone, my guess is maybe about 2 - 5 minutes per hone. As noted above, faster speeds and fresher hones do a quicker job.
The job is complete when the correct results are achieved, not when a certain amount of time has gone past. But, imo, if you have to spend more than 20 minutes on a cylinder something is wrong.
Carefully review this video. As the instructor says, his 30 sec of honing is just for de-glazing, when you replace rings. A rebored engine takes more work.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QtJAuDZXmiU

schri00
01-30-2010, 04:18 PM
If you are using 3 different grades of hone, my guess is maybe about 2 - 5 minutes per hone. As noted above, faster speeds and fresher hones do a quicker job.
The job is complete when the correct results are achieved, not when a certain amount of time has gone past. But, imo, if you have to spend more than 20 minutes on a cylinder something is wrong.
Carefully review this video. As the instructor says, his 30 sec of honing is just for de-glazing, when you replace rings. A rebored engine takes more work.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QtJAuDZXmiU


Great video. I think the key point here is, as the instructor says, to get rid of all the bore machine marks and provide a good surface to help break-in the rings. So I figure the first stage is going to take longer. Thanks MR.

RahX
01-30-2010, 11:42 PM
Don't ball hone, those things are crap. Get a decent honing stone setup to get a good finish. Technique is the key to getting a good crosshatch by hand. Google around before you do it so you get an idea of what you really have to do and what to look for.

http://www.aa1car.com/library/honing98.htm

RahX
01-30-2010, 11:43 PM
Don't ball hone, those things are crap. Get a decent honing stone setup to get a good finish. Technique is the key to getting a good crosshatch by hand. Google around before you do it so you get an idea of what you really have to do and what to look for.

http://www.aa1car.com/library/honing98.htm

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