Engine Rebuild-August 2018
When we picked up the D16A6 long block the seller said that it only ran on 3 cylinders. This wasn't particularly worrisome because
1. Issue could be in the ignition or fuel systems
2. We're going to rebuild it anyhow
3. At $150 (including the SI transmission and axles!) the price was right
So we crossed our fingers, crossed the tracks to the other side of town, and did the deal.
During the tear-down everything looked good; no significant wear on the bearings, no marks on the crank, and no deep scoring on the piston walls. We don't know how many miles this engine had on it, but there was definitely a lip at the top of the cylinders. According to the Harbour Freight telescoping gages the bores themselves were within spec, so we sprinkled it with holy water (beer, actually, I spilled some beer on it by accident) and declared it good 'nuff.
We used a ball hone on the cylinder walls and measured the bearing/crank clearances with plastigage. The head was sent off to a machine shop where we got it dipped, decked and had the valve seats lapped for only 90$.
The rebuild kit contained new bearings and rubber seals which we used during reassembly. By the end of August, we had rebuilt our first engine and were ready to swap it along with the transmission into Crusty.
The Swap-Mid September 2018
Heroic. That's the only word to use when describing one brutally hot, muggy, mosquito-cursed Saturday in Miami when we did the engine swap. I left at 5 for the 2 hour drive to @Kyngfish's house, and found him already disconnecting wiring when I arrived. After some arm twisting he convinced me to drop the engine out the bottom instead of using a hoist, and by 12 we had the old engine and transmission out.
Disaster struck as we were swapping out the clutch and flywheel from the old transmission-we had no clutch alignment tool! Google to the rescue...turns out you can wrap a deep-well 10mm socket with tape and use it in a pinch. By 3 in the afternoon we had the rebuilt d16a6 in the CRX, and were able to get the SI transmission into the car on the 3rd try, sometime around 5. I went back a few days later to bolt up the manifolds, reattach the wiring harness. As of today, the engine and transmission are attached, axles are in, wiring harness and intake is 75% of the way, timing is done, and valve adjustment is mostly done.
So what's left? Everything...everything is left to do, and the clock is ticking down.
Next Up: Budget? Who said anything about a Budget?