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Sticky wrote:A NOS incomplete piston is a broken piston.
A pal of mine had a Stage 4 tune done to a SIL 200 barrel and made the comment of being happy to pay the money to upgrade the piston to an Asso thin ring piston, to which the tuner (probably in the top 5 most respected tuners in the UK) said that the Asso piston was horrible when compared to the SIL's original Mahle 3-ring piston. His reasoning was that; 1. the Asso's alloy was not as good and that the piston was far more likely to suffer seizure, 2. the Asso was far more prone to cracking from transfer windows, 3. The Asso was no more likely to suffer ring breakage if the exhaust width and shape was factored around using the Mahle.
... to add to that, additional benefit would be gained by removing the 3rd (bottom) ring of the Mahle's 3 rings as the extra ring simply resulted in more friction, which meant more friction, more heat and more wear.
It's possible but if it's gone where did it go and what other damage did it do?
Wouldn't it be easier and safer just to get a new piston?
Quite why a piston shouldn’t be re-pegged is a mystery to me, if the same principle of pegging can be followed &/or even improved upon by anybody with any engineering competence.
Re-pegged pistons that I have done have never been known to fail.
The manufacturers of pistons use a wire of a known metallurgy & size for the interference fit that they rely upon. They do not use needles from roller bearings as suggested by many. Manufacturers use wire fitted through to the inside where they bend over the excess of the peg.
They usually use a hard drawn wire that will have similar qualities to ‘Silver Steel’ although Honda used brass pegs in their pistons that many of us used for a few years. They regularly wore out.
The pegs are then finished flush with the piston most commonly during the final machining process.
Thanks for your help ill give it a bit more thought , ive access to all types of welding , brasing ect so hold in place should not be a problem , famous last words lol
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