Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I have started my first of two RB30 conversions this afternoon and came across an interesting scenario.

I am building two side by side, one 400hp for the street, and the other, an 800hp for competition.

Both engines have been pulled down and one block and crank sent off for the usual machining. I didn't take any notice of what came out of either engine and just put everything up on shelves as I broke it down. Fortunately, one set of stock internals is easily discernable from the other as one engine was full of sludge and burned oil which discoloured the components, and here's why.

When I went to fit the main girdle, the crank locked to the point where it wouldn't spin. I thought that there was an issue somewhere with the bearings being put in incorrect packaging, but measurements dictated otherwise. Just for the hell of it, I cleaned up the girdle that came out of the block I sent off first (the sludgy one), fitted it and torqued it down, and lo and behold, everything spun beautifully.

To put it simply, the main girdle off one engine was slightly shorter that the one on the other engine. The girdle went on the other engine without issue, but they had to be fitted to the block of origin.

This is my first 30 build (I've done 26's and 20's) and it's a first for me. I have had a look around to see if there have been other instances of this but I came up short of an answer as most builds are done singly, not side by side.

Maybe there's a workshop or builder out there who can provide an answer to this wierd little teaser?

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/378808-rb30-question-re-main-girdle/
Share on other sites

That's why I'd never mix and match girdles. If I had to use a different one due to damage etc, it would get measured and tunnel bored to suit for sure.

You may luck out with one that might work fine....

ye, all engines are differnt due to core shift in the casting posess.

the block and girdle are machined together, and usually stamped with the clearences from factory on the girdle.

Which is why the girdle from another block caused the crank to jam.

+1, I had the wrong girdle fitted to a block, after all the final measuring was done. fortunately in this case we could hear straight away it wasn't right and pulled it down again before damaging anything except bearings.

They must always either be a pair, or be tunnel bored.

That's very odd Al, mixing and matching girdles is a no-no.. are you 100% sure you didn't mix them up?

Even if the other girdle torqued down and everything spun fine.. I still wouldn't be running it like that. I would be inclined to get the main tunnel line bored so you know it's all good.

  • 2 months later...

Despite which girdle was used, what he is saying is that the tunnel wasn't measured with a micromoter before and after test fitting the main bearings. So therefore you have no idea what your main bearing clearences are.

While you might get away with this for a low power street engine. That the crank spins means there has to be a few thou (or more) clearence in there.

With the "competition" engine you need to have the cradle shaved a thou, install the main studs and then have it tunnel bored until the ID of the bearings measure to create at least a 3 thou oil clearence to the crank you are using.

Tunnel boring ensures alignment of the main bearing saddles and allows the propper clearences to be set and matched to the crank.

Tunnel boring after installing a main stud kit ensures the bearing saddles are round, as torquing the main studs distorts the bearing saddles. Imagine main bearing saddles made out of marshmellow. Steel moves the same when torquing forces are applied, just a lot less. All it takes is 1-2 thou and you have bearing damage, a spun bearing, or a crank that won't turn at all.

  • 2 weeks later...

You can only go so far when tunnel boring to modify the main bearing clearances though. There is a limit on how relaxed you let the crush go when doing this. From memory I believe you can only pick up a few tenths, otherwise its grind or polish to achieve anything else.

  • 2 months later...

Sorry for not getting back to this topic, for some reason I'm not being notified on the forums when a topic I have subscribed to is replied. So I was under the impression that there were no responses.

Anyway, yes, the issue was with myself mistakingly assuming that the girdles would fit between blocks, I just chose the cleaner of the two to start with. I have SNAFU'd somewhere along the way in my thinking.

It's all good now and the engine should be in the car soon as I am presently port matching the RB20DET intake to the 25DE manifold. There's a little bit of difference in size between the two and I just wanted to facilitate an even flow.

Thanks for the replie guys, and Bubba, I'll be hitting you up for some gear soon. I still have your number.

I'll take the latter thanks ;)

But yeah cool, I should probably organise another NIStune group buy for teh Westralians!

I'm at the stage where I'll be dropping in the injectors on the manifold over the weekend, so the resistor pack will be needed fairly soon. PM me if you need my number because I'd like to get hold of one ASAP and I'm more than happy to prepay if needed.

How handy are you with a soldering iron? I'm mucho busy at the moment but more than happy to guide you in its' creation :)

Are you just planning to splice in the resistor box to the power feeds? What engine loom are you using? I found with the RB20 loom the injector layout was confusing (went past, to the water temp senders, then doubled back so it was like 6-5-4 .... 1-2-3)

Suggest having a really good think about how you want to do your wiring :thumbsup:

Once I got my loom apart I found it easier to consolidate it all somewhat, traced the injector power feed and the injector earths back and made a whole new injector harness with brand new plugs.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Not R7R. Meant to type R&R, obviously enough.
    • Bugger "making it look stock". I put one conventional internally fused Hella relay behind each globe. I just pulled the plugs off the back of the globes and built new loom segments with male and female plug parts to match up to the original loom and the globe, and used the original power wires to each globe coming from the switch through the original loom plug to trigger the relays. Ran a big fat (also separately fused) power wire across the front of the car to feed all the relays. It's as ugly as f**k, but it is wedged down between the headlight and battery on the RHS and the airbox and headlight on the LHS, and no-one ever looks in my engine bay, and on the odd occasion that they do I simply give no f**ks for what they think. Fully reversible - not that you'd ever want to. For f**k's sake. It's a Skyline. They made million of the bloody things. We've been crashing them into roadside furniture for 30 years now. There is a negative side effect to putting relays on the headlights. The coil current is too little to properly clean the contacts in the switches and they get blacked up and you have to open them up every couple of years and clean them manually. I have 25 years of experience on this point.
    • I was poking through the R34 wiring diagrams vs R33 and noticed that the R34 has proper headlight relays while the R33 is like the R32 and sends full headlight power through the headlight switch. I'm not afraid of wiring but I really would like to do this in a way that looks OEM (clipping into open positions on the OEM relay box) and also unlike the factory wiring which interlocks the high beam and low beam on the halogen series 1 GTR headlights I want to make it such that turning on the high beams keeps the low beams on as well. Any advice on how to locate the specific connectors + crimp terminals + relays I need? I was thinking one NO relay for low beams and another for combined high + low running off the factory high beam headlight connector. I don't really want to splice into a crusty old probably discontinued factory harness so fully reversible is my goal here.
    • Pretty sure they run the same engine as the Q50 hybrid which specifies 95 RON.  I ran 98 in mine for a while, but it made no difference in performance or economy, so I have been using 95 for the last few years.  I have never hit 6.0L/100km, but have returned mid to high 6 on the highway.  Being a hybrid, fuel economy is a lot more dependant on how you drive it.  At 110km/h, mine never goes into EV mode on the highway, so returns closer to 7.5L/100. urban driving can return low 8s if you are careful or over 10 if you are a bit more enthusiastic on the throttle.
    • About a quarter of what you want to do. It's only R7R, not R&dismantle&replaceparts&reassemble&R. ? It is stock. I already told you, you will NOT have broken those. It's f**king 4th gear for Christ's sake. You just chipped the teeth off.
×
×
  • Create New...