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I have had my rb25 neo rebuilt and have discovered the joy of piston slap with forged pistons when cold. When they're cold there's like an 8 thou clearance from piston to bore to allow for mega expansion; it blows smoke and sounds like a diesel until it's warm (which generally happens by about the end of the street); I suggest there's no way the compression will be as high under these conditions, and perhaps it could even be a 25-50% difference like you're seeing here.

I have had my rb25 neo rebuilt and have discovered the joy of piston slap with forged pistons when cold. When they're cold there's like an 8 thou clearance from piston to bore to allow for mega expansion; it blows smoke and sounds like a diesel until it's warm (which generally happens by about the end of the street); I suggest there's no way the compression will be as high under these conditions, and perhaps it could even be a 25-50% difference like you're seeing here.

sounds like it was built a bit looser then it probably should have been.

nothing worse than piston slap, and it just gets worse... my first car ( cordia turbo) had it bad and even after a rebuild was still slapping away, if your very particular about your car it annoys you everytime you start it, i think all that rocking scuffs the piston and rings, and just accelerates wear and tear.. not to mention sounding like its a worn out engine....

Its very worthwhile to do that important work yourself or inspect it, cause what i thought was a good boring out of my block turned out to be a rough as guts quick job and resulted in piston slap and low compression on a rebuilt motor ( no forged pistons), rings wouldnt bed in and it was a mess...

all those measurements of a thousandth of an inch make big differences, and mechanics can be very rough and approximate instead of precise and exact...

the difference between a motor with perfect clearance and precision compared to others can be huge, sounds rough and dowy compared to sweet and quiet....

I have had my rb25 neo rebuilt and have discovered the joy of piston slap with forged pistons when cold. When they're cold there's like an 8 thou clearance from piston to bore to allow for mega expansion; it blows smoke and sounds like a diesel until it's warm (which generally happens by about the end of the street); I suggest there's no way the compression will be as high under these conditions, and perhaps it could even be a 25-50% difference like you're seeing here.

8 thou is pretty massive, why so big?

If it is blowing smoke when cold it means the rings haven't properly bedded in, this isn't right. 4 thou sounds better for a street car to me.

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