In reply to Keith Tanner :
Thanks Keith, duly noted.
The last time I drove Vail pass, it was in a V6 auto Mustang rental. With me driving. In the snow. At night.We spent 6 hours staring at the back of a tanker. Both of us were sliding all over the road going 5mph downhill. Good, white knuckled times
As stated, I got hung up rather badly here, questioning to bore, or not to bore. Also, last week was back to school for both my Special Lady Friend and I. Let's just say the Community College we both work for is an adventure. Multiple positive Covid tests, some questionable behavior from both students and staff. Maybe that should be all I have to say about that. This is Tennessee, and we're wide open til we're not. What I'm prevaricating about is I didn't feel like working on the projects for a minute there. Long rejuvenating afternoon walks with my old pal whiskey took priority. Moving forward, I'd like a balance of both-after my work obligations are taken care of, of course.
So yeah, measured the pistons. All fall squarely in spec with a difference of 1/10,000th largest to smallest. I quit balancing their weights at 290g for #1, 291g for #2, and 289g for #3. so that's a difference of two paperclips heaviest to lightest. Good enough.
My new mic allowed me to set my bore guage to the minimum acceptable bore.
Dead nuts, and no taper that I could measure.
So, I moved on to dingleball honing.
I started out with motor oil as lube, but figured out PB Blaster worked better. I'm quite satisfied. Next came a liberal coat of motor oil and tamping the powder on the parts cannon. I have now more than doubled what I paid for this car, and I've driven it maybe 15 miles, including the teat drive. Edit: TEST drive. I wish there had bean the former.
My takeaway as a first time Miata engine re-builder:Very impressed.
I don't know if this was the original engine or not, and the "crystallization" on all the engine parts tells me thing saw regular synthetic oil changes, but if this is what a 265K BP8 looks like, they're anvils. I'm convinced the crank nose was poor reassembly at the 210K timing belt change, and somebody put a new pulley on that wobbly E36 M3 recently, possibly hastening the sale.
I like the oil squirters, and am pleased there is no Torque To Yield BS going on (please tell me if I'm wrong about that-I'll research further), and I love hydraulic tappets.
I'll leave you all with an engine building selfie. I very seldomly take selfies. Kind of hate the word.