Piecing together a motor and have some questions.
#1
Brap, Brap, Ole!
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Piecing together a motor and have some questions.
How hard would it be to piece together a motor?
I was thinking about slowly gathering these parts:
12A irons
GSLSE housings
FD rotating assembly
I have a very limited budget and really i am just dreaming right now, but what else would i need here considering i would be also buying a rebuild kit? I mean, i know i need a intake system, water pump, alternator, etc etc. I am just talking about the motor itself.
If this is a retarded thread and it has been discussed before, i am sorry and by all means close it!
I was thinking about slowly gathering these parts:
12A irons
GSLSE housings
FD rotating assembly
I have a very limited budget and really i am just dreaming right now, but what else would i need here considering i would be also buying a rebuild kit? I mean, i know i need a intake system, water pump, alternator, etc etc. I am just talking about the motor itself.
If this is a retarded thread and it has been discussed before, i am sorry and by all means close it!
#3
Brap, Brap, Ole!
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FD rotating assembly is lighter than the TII rotating assembly i believe
I probably dont have the right tools yet and there is no time limit for this build, basically i would just collect the right parts as i go and then build it up when i had the knowledge and time. I have the rebuild DVD, but would really like someone to be there with me and hold my hand as it was rebuilt. Might enlist the help of ManInBlack as he is pretty close to where i live.
I probably dont have the right tools yet and there is no time limit for this build, basically i would just collect the right parts as i go and then build it up when i had the knowledge and time. I have the rebuild DVD, but would really like someone to be there with me and hold my hand as it was rebuilt. Might enlist the help of ManInBlack as he is pretty close to where i live.
#6
If you are on a budget why are you considering fd internals? get a good GSL SE core, rebuild it with streetported 12a plates, then get the racing beat intake and exhaust. The SE internals are a little heavier and same with the flywheel, but that will cut cost and provide better torque and midrange anyway, great for a street car.
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Brap, Brap, Ole!
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Yes i do plan on turbo charging the car, so S5 TII internals then?
And budget wise, that is the genius of slowly putting together a motor, you dont have to shell it all out at once, lol
And budget wise, that is the genius of slowly putting together a motor, you dont have to shell it all out at once, lol
#15
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Planning on a Judge Ito extended port
RB wrap around sidedraft intake
tweakit FI setup
stand alone
turbo hat from rotary shack
and a turbo of undecided specs at the moment, suggestions?
Power??? I have no idea and really dont care, lol. Anything over 300hp is gonna be gravy in the FB
Oh and i plan on it being the ultimate street car. As it is right now i drive the FB about 600 miles a year so it sits in the garage a lot. Truth be told i love showing it off more than i drive it, but i am sure that will be different when the frankenrotor is in there
RB wrap around sidedraft intake
tweakit FI setup
stand alone
turbo hat from rotary shack
and a turbo of undecided specs at the moment, suggestions?
Power??? I have no idea and really dont care, lol. Anything over 300hp is gonna be gravy in the FB
Oh and i plan on it being the ultimate street car. As it is right now i drive the FB about 600 miles a year so it sits in the garage a lot. Truth be told i love showing it off more than i drive it, but i am sure that will be different when the frankenrotor is in there
#17
Turbo widebody FB
iTrader: (1)
Ummm I don't understand why you guys are recommending using a S5 rotating assembaly. The S4 rotating assembaly is slightly heavier, but it has a lower compression (what really matters for power and reliability in a turbo setup). You then need a S4 front counterweight, and a lightweight flywheel and a rear counterweight (if you are using an aftermarket flywheel, which will probally end up being lighter than the S5 rotating assembaly anyways...).
I do agree with Scott that you should use the S6 corner seal springs (they are a wedge shape rather than a wire) they are a much better design. Other things to consider are a RX8 eccentric shaft (1 pound lighter) and RX8 stationary gears, they are hardened and come with windowed bearings.
Back to the compression ratio situation, think about it like this, a lower compression ratio means that you have a LARGER dish in the rotor and can put more air and fuel in the engine at a give time. Therefore you get more power because more charge is getting into your engine at any given time...
I do agree with Scott that you should use the S6 corner seal springs (they are a wedge shape rather than a wire) they are a much better design. Other things to consider are a RX8 eccentric shaft (1 pound lighter) and RX8 stationary gears, they are hardened and come with windowed bearings.
Back to the compression ratio situation, think about it like this, a lower compression ratio means that you have a LARGER dish in the rotor and can put more air and fuel in the engine at a give time. Therefore you get more power because more charge is getting into your engine at any given time...
#23
Banned. I got OWNED!!!
iTrader: (11)
Ummm I don't understand why you guys are recommending using a S5 rotating assembaly. The S4 rotating assembaly is slightly heavier, but it has a lower compression (what really matters for power and reliability in a turbo setup). You then need a S4 front counterweight, and a lightweight flywheel and a rear counterweight (if you are using an aftermarket flywheel, which will probally end up being lighter than the S5 rotating assembaly anyways...).
I do agree with Scott that you should use the S6 corner seal springs (they are a wedge shape rather than a wire) they are a much better design. Other things to consider are a RX8 eccentric shaft (1 pound lighter) and RX8 stationary gears, they are hardened and come with windowed bearings.
Back to the compression ratio situation, think about it like this, a lower compression ratio means that you have a LARGER dish in the rotor and can put more air and fuel in the engine at a give time. Therefore you get more power because more charge is getting into your engine at any given time...
I do agree with Scott that you should use the S6 corner seal springs (they are a wedge shape rather than a wire) they are a much better design. Other things to consider are a RX8 eccentric shaft (1 pound lighter) and RX8 stationary gears, they are hardened and come with windowed bearings.
Back to the compression ratio situation, think about it like this, a lower compression ratio means that you have a LARGER dish in the rotor and can put more air and fuel in the engine at a give time. Therefore you get more power because more charge is getting into your engine at any given time...
use stock corner seals and replace the rubber insert but def get the s6 springs. for seals i would get the rotary aviation. i have never broken one and have been through a few sets of the atkins and oem seals. one tuning mishap and resulting detonation will blow the atkins/oem seals to bits.
get s5 rotors, na or turbo. s4 is heavier. s5 housings. on the s5 housings the spark plugs are farther apart vs the s4 resulting in being able to run more advanced timing. renesis e shaft and stat gears.
man i cant find the exact compressions for the different year rotors but i think this is right
s4 turbo 8.7:1
s4 na 9.5:1
s5 turbo 9.0:1
s5 na 9.7:1
#24
Say hello to Mr.Wankel
iTrader: (7)
ill be building a 300 or so set up for my SA. to me it seems like youre going through WAY too much trouble, and WAY too much money.
you can easily hit 300hp with a S5 T2 swap and still keep the S5 ECU. ill be doing tha initially. then i may swap it over to SE rotors and a standalone, just for a little more spunk. whenever i break it apart itll also get port work.
you could EASILY spend a crap load less than youre looking at spending and have A LOT less trouble. the perks of your idea is itll look more "old school" to the untrained eye, but the untrained eye probably wouldnt even know what they were looking at anyways.
also, on the debate about rotors. S5 all the way. yes the S4 T2 have a lower compression, but that only matters if youre wanting extremely high numbers. theyre SUCK when not in boost and wont be as responsive as the S5 rotors.
you can easily hit 300hp with a S5 T2 swap and still keep the S5 ECU. ill be doing tha initially. then i may swap it over to SE rotors and a standalone, just for a little more spunk. whenever i break it apart itll also get port work.
you could EASILY spend a crap load less than youre looking at spending and have A LOT less trouble. the perks of your idea is itll look more "old school" to the untrained eye, but the untrained eye probably wouldnt even know what they were looking at anyways.
also, on the debate about rotors. S5 all the way. yes the S4 T2 have a lower compression, but that only matters if youre wanting extremely high numbers. theyre SUCK when not in boost and wont be as responsive as the S5 rotors.
#25
Turbo widebody FB
iTrader: (1)
I dunno I just figure that if you are using a turbo that is reaching full boost potential quickily and you will make more power with s4 rotors. I can deffinately see where your coming from. When I discussed my setup with my friend (has been building rotary engines for 20ish years) he also suggested the s4 rotors for a setup like mine.
But like the other guys mentioned it depends on your goal. If you want more HP go with the S4 rotors, and if you want a very responsive setup go with the S5.
But like the other guys mentioned it depends on your goal. If you want more HP go with the S4 rotors, and if you want a very responsive setup go with the S5.