Quote:
Wouldn't a larger pan (more oil) stop the cavitation issue? Cavitation is usually caused by a pump sucking more than can be supplied, no?So the head in particular is no more of a weak link than the rest of the engine in terms of oiling?
-Z Yaaaa- wrote:honestly nobody has ever really PROVEN whats weak.. the oil pump or the block passages, etc.
the pump itself quite honestly could be adequate but since its driven by a stupid biycycle chain and has a @!#$ty ratio its held back, really.
i would swap ANY LD9 to the 2.3 style. stock or otherwise. ...just to be safe.
and dont worry about the "harmonic balancer". the stock 2.4 system has proven more dangerous to "bearing life" than any aluminum crank pulley ever used on any quad 4 family engine ever has.
SweetnessGT wrote:SpeedRacerZ wrote:The pump itself might not be the sole reason, but the pickup, balance shafts, chain...... the whole oiling "unit" is a POS. At higher RPMs, how fast is that little 2.4 oil pump spinning? I checked tonight, the 2.4 cank to balance shaft gear is a 1:2 ratio, while I believe the 2.3 is 1:1.
as far as weights, someone forgot to weigh the chain, gear, tensioner, bolts....... I just tore a balance shaft assebly off a 2.4 tonight, heavy POS! lol
Where is Chris (SunFighterGT?) with all the 2.4 oiling answers? I remember him saying he spent hundreds of hours and dollars (canadian) researching the 2.4 oiling system for his build.
From my point of view, it looks like the #3 is the first to receive oil, and therefore the first to receive oil airation or cavataion.....
please excuse my spelling errors, for some reason my netbook doesnt point out my errors, and my iphone always fixes mine for me..... I'm lazy and tired.
Clearly I don't read through this forum as thoroughly as I used to! Sorry for missing this Brian... Oh and it's SweetnessGT now.
Quality control by GM is a huge issue and detriment to this block... a lot of the issue is in how they cast it. Chamfering the passages helps a lot if you can get in there... this is something I had done that took a considerable amount of time.
I sectioned a stock block to see it for myself (a fun process in itself) and the passages are questionable - that's for sure. #3 sees oiling first as Brian said. The block I cut also had questionable casting to #3 as well as #1 bearing.
I stuck with the 2.4 setup running with Mev's JBP pump. It has a different gear that increases volume which is a help but I have proven through two engines it provides almost zero pressure benefit over the stock setup. I still see around 10 psi at hot idle and 35 psi at 3500 rpm which is exactly what I've seen on two of my other stock LD9 setups. Bear in mind this reading is from the head where everybody else gets it... the pressure is much better when tested at the block with a snap-on gauge as we had to test it in multiple spots to ensure good oiling after 1500 km.
The biggest issue was mentioned by Brian - the gear ratio. The LD9's stock pump spins at twice the cranks rotation so at 7000 rpm the pump is rocking a solid 14000 rpm which it's just not up to handling, even if you overfill the oil.
In all honesty had I trusted Mev to do the 2.3 swap and taken the time to find the swap parts I would have done it, and to this day wish I had. Maybe down the road I'll pull the engine again and do the swap. The engine has been torn down multiple times and I can say the chamfering of the oil passages helped quite a bit but considering I wanted this engine to go to 7500 rpm give or take and I have a pump in there that runs at a 2:1 ratio I don't feel 100% safe doing it.
C'est la vie. Live and learn. That's all the info I have for you, take what you'd like from it.
My current mostly stock LD9 doesn't see over 3500 rpm on a daily basis and even when run low on oil has been fine. I don't dare abuse it though.
-Chris-
-MD- Enforcer wrote:I WENT DIGGING!
SweetnessGT wrote:SpeedRacerZ wrote:The pump itself might not be the sole reason, but the pickup, balance shafts, chain...... the whole oiling "unit" is a POS. At higher RPMs, how fast is that little 2.4 oil pump spinning? I checked tonight, the 2.4 cank to balance shaft gear is a 1:2 ratio, while I believe the 2.3 is 1:1.
as far as weights, someone forgot to weigh the chain, gear, tensioner, bolts....... I just tore a balance shaft assebly off a 2.4 tonight, heavy POS! lol
Where is Chris (SunFighterGT?) with all the 2.4 oiling answers? I remember him saying he spent hundreds of hours and dollars (canadian) researching the 2.4 oiling system for his build.
From my point of view, it looks like the #3 is the first to receive oil, and therefore the first to receive oil airation or cavataion.....
please excuse my spelling errors, for some reason my netbook doesnt point out my errors, and my iphone always fixes mine for me..... I'm lazy and tired.
Clearly I don't read through this forum as thoroughly as I used to! Sorry for missing this Brian... Oh and it's SweetnessGT now.
Quality control by GM is a huge issue and detriment to this block... a lot of the issue is in how they cast it. Chamfering the passages helps a lot if you can get in there... this is something I had done that took a considerable amount of time.
I sectioned a stock block to see it for myself (a fun process in itself) and the passages are questionable - that's for sure. #3 sees oiling first as Brian said. The block I cut also had questionable casting to #3 as well as #1 bearing.
I stuck with the 2.4 setup running with Mev's JBP pump. It has a different gear that increases volume which is a help but I have proven through two engines it provides almost zero pressure benefit over the stock setup. I still see around 10 psi at hot idle and 35 psi at 3500 rpm which is exactly what I've seen on two of my other stock LD9 setups. Bear in mind this reading is from the head where everybody else gets it... the pressure is much better when tested at the block with a snap-on gauge as we had to test it in multiple spots to ensure good oiling after 1500 km.
The biggest issue was mentioned by Brian - the gear ratio. The LD9's stock pump spins at twice the cranks rotation so at 7000 rpm the pump is rocking a solid 14000 rpm which it's just not up to handling, even if you overfill the oil.
In all honesty had I trusted Mev to do the 2.3 swap and taken the time to find the swap parts I would have done it, and to this day wish I had. Maybe down the road I'll pull the engine again and do the swap. The engine has been torn down multiple times and I can say the chamfering of the oil passages helped quite a bit but considering I wanted this engine to go to 7500 rpm give or take and I have a pump in there that runs at a 2:1 ratio I don't feel 100% safe doing it.
C'est la vie. Live and learn. That's all the info I have for you, take what you'd like from it.
My current mostly stock LD9 doesn't see over 3500 rpm on a daily basis and even when run low on oil has been fine. I don't dare abuse it though.
-Chris-
Oedwards wrote:Could you not change the gear ratio slightly? Like 1.75:1 or something?
SweetnessGT wrote:-Z Yaaaa- wrote:honestly nobody has ever really PROVEN whats weak.. the oil pump or the block passages, etc.
the pump itself quite honestly could be adequate but since its driven by a stupid biycycle chain and has a @!#$ty ratio its held back, really.
i would swap ANY LD9 to the 2.3 style. stock or otherwise. ...just to be safe.
and dont worry about the "harmonic balancer". the stock 2.4 system has proven more dangerous to "bearing life" than any aluminum crank pulley ever used on any quad 4 family engine ever has.
I made a huge post about this with my findings and how I came to my conclusions about 3-4 weeks ago in another LAD9 oil system thread, actually. Nobody noticed.
-Chris-