





I taught him everything he knows

mk1 wrote:Rich is known as Mr SA1100![]()
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, he's ya man on these engines
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I taught him everything he knows
Useful info, thanks Goff.Timmy201 Regarding the SA engine ,i forgot to say, if you go down the route of using standard length rods and having the top of the blocked decked you will need to use small bore pushrods and head studs , hope this helps'
Hey Luis, Mazda and Honda Jazz Pistons are available in those sizes, I can look a little later at the Pin to Crown Heights but I'm sure they are all lower than A Series.LuisM wrote: Useful info, thanks Goff.
in the past i had been looking at piston options for large overbores ( ~ 73mm ), there might be some pistons from japanese engines ( MAzda, Mitsubishi, Datsun ) that might suit....
anyone here has used them by chance ? maybe some are a bit taller and no need to heavily deck the top of the block.
Thanks
Luis
Thanks Goff, I did remember reading about the small bore pushrods on one of the older posts here. I haven't seen any small bore specific head studs? I would assume if I bought the same ones that fitted my 1098 I'd be OKgoff wrote:Timmy201 Regarding the SA engine ,i forgot to say, if you go down the route of using standard length rods and having the top of the blocked decked you will need to use small bore pushrods and head studs , hope this helps'
Goff
I have looked at all the options - longer rods, taller pistons and decking the block. I have come to decide that decking the block would be best for me. It is a one time operation for machining and then it allows you to use standard parts - rods, pistons, pushrods etcLuisM wrote:Useful info, thanks Goff.
in the past i had been looking at piston options for large overbores ( ~ 73mm ), there might be some pistons from japanese engines ( MAzda, Mitsubishi, Datsun ) that might suit....
anyone here has used them by chance ? maybe some are a bit taller and no need to heavily deck the top of the block.
Thanks
Luis
I have done a little searching and can't find anything near enough to work - you might have more luck though. Then a secondary problem might be the gudgeon pin diameter is different and needs to be corrected.Spider wrote:Hey Luis, Mazda and Honda Jazz Pistons are available in those sizes, I can look a little later at the Pin to Crown Heights but I'm sure they are all lower than A Series.
What are small bore head studsalmondgreen wrote:What are small bore head studs?
Hey Chris,Hey Luis, Mazda and Honda Jazz Pistons are available in those sizes, I can look a little later at the Pin to Crown Heights but I'm sure they are all lower than A Series.
Cheers Luis,LuisM wrote:Hey Chris,Hey Luis, Mazda and Honda Jazz Pistons are available in those sizes, I can look a little later at the Pin to Crown Heights but I'm sure they are all lower than A Series.
did some searching and came up with some Mitsubishi 4G36 engine pistons , 73mm bore and 39.5mm compression height..1.5mm than the mini ones.
http://www.totopiston.co.jp/cat/piston/toto11ma-1.pdf
if i get one of these cranks, i'll check further these pistons.
Cheers
Luis
Ha !timmy201 wrote:I think you should have 3.2" stroke for a 1275?
So the amount off the top is 0.225" or 5.7mm
Absolutely !mk1 wrote:Without putting too fine a point on it. Using tall pistons is just daft. The whole idea of these engines is to me a free revving unit. Sticking daft great heavy pistons in it is a seriously retrograde step.
Thanks Graham, what cam are you using out of interest? Good to hear you like this style of enginegr4h4m wrote:I run a SA crank, bored plus 40, using calver pistons and a set of longer H beam rods with the correct size for the crank journal, to save chopping the block. I used Williams rods, the bloke peddling them is not far down the road in north wales. He was very good to deal with. I met a mini 7 racer that runs them to 9600. My cars rev limiter is current set at 8300, it gets there very quickly and makes great power.
The engine tuned out better that I thought it would, it’s fantastic and I love it.