BillyP
Veteran Member
Sounds kind of stupid to me. After further thought, not kind of, it is.
daTeacha said:The new ones are about 9 ounces heavier than the old ones -- around 2.1 kg vs. about 3 kg.
daTeacha said:The tractor is an Oliver 99 and it does indeed have a stroke of about 11 inches...
This weight comparison holds only for the original plan for putting the new pistons on 1 and 4. This plan was as close to wrong as you can get. There is an opportunity here to teach students about balancing. The heavy pistons can be dealt with by pairing them so that they counterbalance each other. For a low rpm tractor engine the heavy weights should be ok - - altho the percentage increase in weight is huge and will stress the rods and bearings beyond the manufacturers nominal ratings. The manufacturer didnt use boat anchor pistons for a reason. But they did make things more than strong enuf for the pistons they did use. Perhaps strong enuf to use boat anchors with rings.JimParker said:Let's see... Nearly 2 pounds (.9 kg = 1.98 lbs) difference in weight, and moving 11 inches per stroke... Even at 1,600 rpm, that's a lot of unbalanced force being developed on each up/down stroke...
Not only would I not do it,.. I wouldn't want to be standing anywhere near it when it cranks up to operating RPM!
My main concern, however, would be for the kid who instead of learning how to do something the right way, is being taught to take short cuts and perform shoddy maintenance. If this thing blows itself apart, what do you suppose are the odds this kid will ever feel confident turning a wrench again, knowing she destroyed an engine the last time she touched one?
PM me, and I'll find a way to pay for the 2 extra pistons so she can do it right... That's how strongly I feel about teaching kids right!
Highbeam said:As a 4-h project being done on a borrowed machine there are plenty of reasons to do this project properly including matching pistons. To teach an impressionable youngster how to botch a job is a disservice to her and to the next youngster that won't be lent a tractor as a result of the bailing wire job.
Cutting big corners to get a tractor running in time to harvest a crop is one thing. Botching a job as part of a learning experience is the worst time to do it wrong.
Whether or not the botched job will get by long enough for the tractor to be loaded onto a trailer is going to be tough to answer but I don't think it is the right thing to do in this situation.
ovrszd said:I'm going to stick with HB on this one. Whether it can be rigged up to work is irrelevant. As well as whether this engine will run long hours or not. The important thing here is to teach this student the correct way to build an engine. This student is going to remember whatever you teach her for the rest of her life. It's that first impression thing. I remember in great detail the first tractor engine I overhauled as an FFA project!!!! When I tried to start it, it would not turn over. Locked up tight. The teacher never educated me in the procedure of keeping the rod caps with the appropriate rod. It embarrassed me that I had to take it back apart. How is this student going to feel if all these "great shadetree ideas" fail in the first few minutes of operation???![]()
Jimbrown said:Well I am going to step in and dissagree with most of the answers. There comes a time when you got to teach people to use what they got and make it work. The world ain't perfect. Any one can take all the corerct parts and make something work the challange is to make things work that others say won't work. I had a MG B that had two different types of pistons in it an it ran just fine. I autocrossed it around three states and took a lot of first places. Two of the pistons had three rings and two of them had five rings. I think it is common practice to bore one or two cylinders with out boring them all and running engines. I have heard but never done it of simply pulling one piston and running egines with one piston missing. I think that was common during ww1 and ww11. Next I bet that thing has a 200 lb fly wheel on it and 11oz of imbalance anin't goona matter hill of beens.
daTeacha said:I just wonder what you guys think about this one. One of my students brought in two pistons from a tractor she is restoring for FFA. The engine is a gasser, tops out about 1600 rpm. The pistons are 5 inches in diameter on a 4 cylinder engine. She has two new ones and two old ones. The new ones are about 9 ounces heavier than the old ones -- around 2.1 kg vs. about 3 kg. The plan is to place the new ones in cylinders 1 and 4 so they are travelling up and down together but opposite the old ones in cylinders 2 and 3. The things are pretty costly so they don't want to buy 4 new pistons. They tried it with the heavy and light running opposite each other and got a very shaky result.
Two schools of thought are these: 1) That's simply way to much difference in mass between the pistons for this to work, regardless of how slowly the engine turns. 2) Since it won't be running fast, it should be okay.
I suggested putting it together enough so it would spin on the starter, leave the plugs out, juice the 6V starter with 12V to spin it pretty fast, and crank it to see what happens. Any other ideas? I tend toward the idea that it's going to shake itself apart pretty quickly if they run it with the mismatched pistons.
patrick_g said:Some say it is GOOD to teach her how to bubble gum and bailing wire it as a learing experience. I say it is best to learn to do it right FIRST and then with experience later learn what sort of improvising could be done for an emergency fix.
Pat
patrick_g said:Larry, Let me put you on the spot. If you were supervising the project, remembering it is a student wth little previoius experience, do you think you would just "stick it together" and hope? Wouldn't you be inclined to look into the parts applicability a bit and try to put it together as right as was practical? Note that more than one of us has volunteered to help a little with $ if that is required.
Some say it is GOOD to teach her how to bubble gum and bailing wire it as a learing experience. I say it is best to learn to do it right FIRST and then with experience later learn what sort of improvising could be done for an emergency fix.
What is your take?
Pat