Engine

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Old School Repair: This Dude Welds A Crankshaft Back Together Like A Boss! It Was Broken In Two!

If you watch videos from other countries, where guys are doing repairs that would seem nearly impossible without modern tools, you start to appreciate and understand what our grandparents and great grandparents were doing to make similar repairs. It’s a true testament to how good something can be even without CNC machines or what have you. In this video, the only equipment used to fix this completely snapped crankshaft is a drill press, a stick welder, and a lathe. The lathe isn’t anything new, but it does seem to work well, and the guy using it clearly knows what he’s doing. But the lathe could be 50 years old or 5, it’s all the same.

Watch as this guy cleans and machines each end of the broken pieces, which might actually be from two different crankshafts, slides them together, indexes them, and then gets his arc welding on. He then straightens the crank, machines the crank, and finally drills the oiling holes in it and then sends it on its way to be used in some truck or what have you. It’s impressive and you’ll dig it.

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Dyno Proven 500 Horsepower Combos: Three Stock Bottom End 5.3 LS Combos That Will Make You 500 Horsepower Or More.

I get asked about LS engine combos all the time, and the overwhelming majority of them are from people who think that they need to build an engine with all aftermarket parts. When I ask them how much horsepower they want to make, the vast majority say something like 450 horsepower. This makes me shake my head, because making 400 to 500 horsepower is simple and doable if you have a 5.3 LS that runs. Stock they make 350 horsepower, so anything you do from there will make real power improvements. A camshaft and headers will make over 400, and when you combine an intake, heads, etc, there are real power numbers to be had. And then there’s nitrous! Okay that’s another video, these are completely naturally aspirated combos that are based on a stock bottom end 5.3L.

Check out Richard’s combos, dyno results, and more in the video below.

Video Description:

HOW DO I MAKE 500 HP WITH MY 5.3L? DO I NEED FORGED INTERNALS TO MAKE 500 HP WITH MY 5.3L? CAN MY 5.3L MAKE 500 HP WITHOUT BOOST? WHAT IS THE BEST CAM TO USE ON MY 5.3L? WHAT ARE THE BEST HEADS TO USE ON MY 5.3L? WHAT INTAKE SHOULD I USE ON MY 5.3L? CHECK OUT THIS VIDEO ON THREE (3) DIFFERENT 5.3L BUILDS THAT NOT ONLY EXCEEDED 500 FLYWHEEL HP, BUT DID SO WITH THE STOCK BOTTOM END (STOCK BLOCK, CRANK, RODS AND PISTONS). ALL YOU NEED ARE THE RIGHT HEADS, CAM AND INTAKE (WITH HEADERS) AND YOU TOO CAN REACH THE 500-HP MARK.

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New Product Install: New Mid-Mount Gen III HEMI Front Accessory Drive – HEMI Swap Greatness!

One of the most annoying and frustrating parts of any late-model engine swap can be fitting a bunch of accessories that never came in your car up front and in between the engine and radiator. Whether you realize it or not, almost all of the late model V8 cars are considerably larger than their previous counterparts. A new Challenger is bigger than a 1970 Challenger, for example, and so is the underhood space. These new cars are designed to fit around all the stuff that needs to be on these late model engines, and the older cars weren’t. Thankfully the gang at Holley has come up with the solution. Their new Mid Mount accessory drive system is a game-changer.

When Holley came out with accessory drive systems for the LS engine it made swapping one into just about anything much less of a headache, and now Mopar fanatics are going to benefit from the same technology. Their bracketless design means everything fits tight to the block minimizing any chance of interference between accessories and the chassis, body, etc.

Video Description:

Holley’s new Gen III Hemi Mid-Mount Accessory Drive Kits offers a simple, clean and reliable way to install all of the serpentine belt-driven accessories for your late-model Mopar engine onto our patent-pending bracket-less design. This allows the alternator, air conditioning pump, power steering pump, and everything else to be mounted tighter to the engine, making a Gen III Hemi swap an easier affair, regardless if you are using a VVT or non-VVT engine in your build! https://www.holley.com/products/engin…

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Junkyard LS Cam Test: Will The Same Camshaft Work With A Carb, EFI, Nitrous, Or Boost?

When it comes to camshafts there is never a shortage of opinions or available grinds. And one thing that I always find amusing is the “ideal conditions” world that so many hot rodders, racers, and tuners seem to think they are in, when in fact some very small percentage of them are in that place at all. If you are racing at very highly competitive, elite, or combination limited levels, where every single horsepower can make a difference between winning or losing, then having the perfect camshaft might be the difference over a weekend of racing. But if you aren’t in the small percentage of racers who find themselves in that position, then you open up a world that includes a lot of camshafts and engine components that will give you everything you need.

But do you have to have a different camshaft for your LS engine if you are running a carburetor instead of EFI? How about if you add boost to it? Richard Holdener has done the testing so that you can see the answers right here. Watch

Video Description:

DO YOU NEED A SPECIFIC CAM FOR BOOST? WHAT ABOUT FOR A CARB, FOR EFI OR FOR NITROUS OXIDE? WHAT IF I TOLD YOU THE SAME CAM WORKS ON ALL THOSE APPLICATIONS? HAS RICHARD LOTS HIS MARBLES? CHECK OUT THIS VIDEO WHERE I RAN THE SAME CAM ON A CARBURETED LS, A NITROUS LS, AN EFI LS AND A SUPERCHARGED EFI (GAS AND E85) LS. WHAT HAPPENED WHEN I RAN THE SAME COMP CAM DESIGNED FOR AN NA APPLICATION, ON ALL THESE DIFFERENT COMBOS? FULL DYNO RESULTS.

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Compression Testing Junkyard Engines, In The Junkyard. Know What You Are Getting Before You Buy, Because This Engine Is Junk!

Here’s another junkyard video from Richard Holdener, the king of junkyard horsepower, and one that teaches you how to choose the right engine at the junkyard. This one hits close to home as Richard needs one too replace the Ameri-Barra that he strapped to the dyno but that has no compression in some of the cylinders. Sometimes you end up with a loser when you grab an engine from the wrecking yard. It’s just part of the deal. Hell, with as many engines as Richard has pulled from the yard there is no way he can be too made about getting one that sucks. The odds are usually in his favor, but not with the Atlas 4200, aka Ameri-Barra engine in the video below.

We’re putting these two videos together so you can feel Richard’s pain during the testing of the first engine so you can understand his motivation to do some testing when trying to find another one. Oh and did we forget to mention how many head bolts broke while trying to get them out of this engine? Yeah, it isn’t pretty, but you are going to want to watch because you just have to laugh. After all, if you don’t laugh then you will cry and nobody wants to see a grown man cry.

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(Words and Photos by Todd Ryden) It’s summertime, it’s a hot one and there’s a severe shortage of events, however that doesn’t mean that you can’t hit the road and cruise! When it comes to driving in this extreme summer heat, one thing you have got to make sure is dialed in on your hot rod is the cooling system. Sitting at a light watching the temp gauge rise like your tach saps the fun right out of a nice cruise. When it came to cooling, our ’64 Chevelle had some issues. With a very timid 350 and factory A/C, the car has just never run as cool as we thought it should. It was equipped with a 4-row radiator and a pair of 20 year old electric fans, but rolling down the road on a warm day would still present +200-degree temps, and turning the A/C on would put it over the top – so what good is having A/C if you can’t use it in the heat? It was time for a solution, so we dialed up www.flex-a-lite.com to check out their direct fit radiators.

Flex-A-Lite has been designing and refining cooling solutions for nearly 60 years and with a couple key taps we found exactly what we needed; a direct bolt-in aluminum radiator built with their exclusive Extruded Tube Core Performance technology. Icing on the cake was that the radiator was also available with a fully shrouded 15” Black Magic Xtreme S-Blade electric fan with an adjustable thermostatic controller. And, it comes pre-mounted from the factory – sold!

So what exactly is the Extruded Tube Core technology built into the radiator? Traditional radiators have 2, 3 or 4 rows of oval tubes that the coolant flows through (hence the name 4-row or 4-core radiator). Rather than having these oval tubes surrounded by cooling fins, Flex-A-Lite uses an extruded core with several coolant passages across the entire thickness of the radiator core. This creates more contact between the coolant and the extruded tube which improves cooling.

The flat area of these extrusions provides an ideal surface to braze the cooling fins to maximize the contact between the tubes and fins for improved heat rejection. The cores are brazed together in a proprietary oven system and machine welded so there is no epoxy used at asdll. On top of that, the cooling fins themselves are treated to tiny louvers punched into them to direct airflow more efficiently. Cool stuff (sorry, couldn’t resist.)
When Flex-A-Lite said direct-fit, they meant an exact fit. We did have to change the upper hose due to the previous aftermarket unit having a different style outlet but who knows where that came from. The new S-Blade fan covers the entire core and is much more powerful than the small duals we had. Since we already had fan relays in place, we simply spliced the original fan connector to the new one.

The Flex-A-Lite radiator and electric fan combo made a noticeable difference to the temp of our Chevelle, both while on the road and when sitting in traffic (thanks in part to the efficient Black Magic Extreme fan. At steady cruising we’re running consistently 10-15-degrees lower temps and while stopped at lights, the fan actually lowers the temp to where the fan cycles off – the old setup couldn’t do that.

Flex-A-Lite offers a long list of direct fit radiators as well as versions for specific LS swaps. The LS swap models have the inlet and outlet on the passenger side, plus they include a threaded port in the side tank to connect to the LS engine steam tubes. Check out the Extruded Tube Core radiators as well as their transmission and engine oil coolers. Make yourself, and your engine, happy on those hot summer cruises.

SIDEBAR
BEFORE/AFTER
We wanted to try to be able to show the improvements between our old cooling system and the new Flex-A-Lite unit so before tearing into the Chevelle, we took it for a six mile loop through town and a couple miles on the highway. Then, we let it sit and idle at the shop for 10 minutes while we checked the temps near the upper inlet and lower outlet with a temp gun. We also had a dash gauge and a temp value from the EFI system.
After the drive we measured only a couple degrees between the inlet and outlet temps of the radiator. No wonder the engine wasn’t cooling. Plus, the fans were never able to pull the temp down enough to cycle off.
With the Flex-A-Lite radiator and fan installed, we hit the road for our same six mile trek through town followed by a 10-minute idle soak. The gauges both showed a 10-15 degree drop while just cruising without the fan even running. We also recorded about a 20-degree difference between the inlet and outlet. Quite a drop compared to the old radiator!
The car definitely runs cooler and the single fan pulls the temp down to where the fan actually cycles off while we’re at a stop. In short, the Flex-a-Lite update definitely made us cooler and we can actually enjoy cruising again and using our A/C.


No matter how hard we try with drip pans, inevitably, there will be a mess. Coolant system or trans fluid…bring in the kitty litter.


On the right is the mount that aligns with the factory radiator support for a bolt-in fit. Note the sturdy electric fan mount which also includes a rubber seal around the fan shroud to ensure the fan draws air in and across the fins.


Flex-A-Lite includes a 22-24 pound cap is included to seal the coolant and control the pressure. Note the screw-in overflow nipple. No cheesy soldered one to break off one day.


Sitting side by side, you can see how many more rows of fins the new unit has by replacing the upper and lower tank. Also, the single fan covers as much, and more, room than the old duals.


Flex-a-Lite offers a controller for the electric with an adjustable activation point. We didn’t install the controller (yet) because our EFI system handles the temperature activation. With plans for a new carb test in our future, the controller will be put to good use soon.


For our overflow tank, we simply made a simple aluminum bracket that bolted to the fan mount.


The install was about as bolt-in as possible and we saw immediate results in the cooling capabilities of the new Flex-A-Lite radiator and fan. We’re cool again! (We also noticed how much TLC our Chevelle needs under the hood in the detailing department.

Source:
Flex-A-Lite
www.flex-a-lite.com
Tech : 253-922-2700

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Back On The Buick: Here’s A Lost Episode Of The Hagerty Straight Eight Redline Rebuild Series

We’ve been jonesing for an update on the Hagerty Buick Straight Eight Redline Rebuild project from Hagerty of late. With the whole social distancing and other junk it’s stopped a lot of these projects in their tracks. Thankfully there was some footage that had been overlooked and has not been found. This episode takes us back to the machine shop and shows a few interesting things regarding the cylinder head  that is going back on the engine.

Between the CC work that is done, the porting and polishing, and other touching that’s handled on the head, the different in volume is interesting. There’s actually some CC volume to be made back with a fresh set of modern valves as the factory ones have a huge dish in them and actually add a fairly large amount of volume to the chamber.

This is neat stuff as we have never messed with an inline eight. Having not been down this road before we get the feeling that we learn something from every one of the series videos. This engine has been a toughie since the start of the project but the progress, while slow, is being made.

The head looks at lot better at the end than at the start. Sporty!

Press play to see an update on the Buick Straight eight Redline Rebuild –

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2021 Nissan Rogue Platinum

2021 Nissan Rogue Platinum

Nissan revealed the third generation of its popular compact SUV today via an online presentation. The redesigned-for-2021 Nissan Rogue gets new features, a bit more horsepower, and wears fresh styling that is a bit sharper-edged than before.

More Nissan Rogue news and reviews

2021 Nissan Rogue

Despite an all-new platform, the new Rogue’s dimensions are barely changed. All exterior measurements stand pat except for overall length (1.5 inches shorter) and height (0.2 inches lower). The Rogue remains one of the most spacious vehicles in the compact SUV class; cargo volume behind the rear seats is unchanged at 39.3 cubic feet, but the capacity with the rear seats folded down grows from 70.0 to 74.1 cubic feet.

2021 Nissan Rogue Platinum

2021 Nissan Rogue Platinum

As before, S, SV, and SL trim levels are available, but a top-line Platinum model also joins the roster—it comes standard with features such as semi-aniline leather upholstery, a 12.3-inch Digital Dashboard display, and navigation-linked ProPILOT Assist driving-aid system. All Rogues get the same engine: a 2.5-liter 4-cylinder that makes 181 horsepower and 181 pound-feet of torque—those figures are 11 hp and 6 lb-ft better than the previous-gen Rogue. As before, a continuously variable automatic (CVT) is the lone transmission, and all models are available with front-wheel drive or all-wheel drive.

Toyota RAV4 news and reviews

2021 Nissan Rogue

2021 Nissan Rogue Platinum

Nissan calls the new Rogue’s interior a “family hub,” and emphasizes the Rogue’s family-friendly features. A redesigned electronic gear selector frees up space for a “floating” center console with an open purse-shelf area underneath. The rear seats have been designed with child-seat installation in mind, and the rear doors open almost 90 degrees for easy ingress and egress. The available remote engine start with Intelligent Climate Control allows the driver to pre-heat or pre-cool the vehicle before getting in. The keyless-entry system now includes lock/unlock buttons on all four doors instead of just the front doors, and the Rogue’s novel Divide-n-Hide cargo management system, which uses configurable divider panels in the rear cargo area, has been redesigned.

First Look: 2020 Honda CR-V Hybrid

2021 Nissan Rogue Platinum

2021 Nissan Rogue Platinum

Newly available features include a wireless smartphone charger, full-color 10.8-inch head-up display, and tri-zone climate control. Other available features include heated front and rear seats, heated outside mirrors, heated steering wheel, wireless Apple CarPlay, hands-free power liftgate, and a 360-degree around-view monitor.

Nissan’s Safety Shield 360 suite of active safety technologies, which includes automatic emergency braking with pedestrian detection, blind-spot alert, rear cross-traffic alert, lane-departure warning, rear automatic braking, and automatic high-beam headlights, is standard on all models. Also standard are a driver alertness monitor and a rear-door alert feature which reminds drivers to check the rear seat for children, pets, or items that may have been forgotten.

First Look: 2021 Toyota Venza

2021 Nissan Rogue Platinum

2021 Nissan Rogue Platinum

The available ProPILOT Assist system, which pairs adaptive cruise control with lane-centering steering assist, has been updated with next-generation radar and camera technology that Nissan says enables smoother braking, better steering-assist feel, and improved detection performance when other vehicles cut into the lane. A ProPILOT Assist with Navi-Link feature is standard on the top-line Platinum and optional on SL; it pairs the driving-assist system with the navigation-system, which can automatically slow the vehicle for upcoming road curves and freeway exits.

The 2021 Nissan Rogue is slated to go on sale this fall. Full specs and pricing will be announced closer to that time.

CG Says:

No big surprises here; the 2021 Nissan Rogue strikes us as a fairly conventional redesign, with no radical changes from the previous generation. That’s sound strategy on Nissan’s part, because the Rogue is its best-selling vehicle in the U.S. The focus here is on family-friendly features and safety, as well as daily-commuter comfort and convenience. Value pricing has also been a key part of the Rogue’s appeal, and we expect that to continue with this redesigned model.

Listen to the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2021 Nissan Rogue Platinum

Listen to the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

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