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Due to the wear characteristics of the stock 2ZZ bore we STRONGLY recommend that the block be sleeved with Darton iron sleeves when forged pistons are used to ensure long life and maximum durability.
AceSniper wrote:hmm stock liners would be fine if ya staying n/a?
RomanV wrote:Hahaha, what you do mean 'no ones done anything to 2zzs'
And yeah, it seems odd that they dont have steel sleeves, I thought that all alloy block engines did...,.
Mr Revhead wrote:barry is looking at boosting.....
so a lot of what has been done by the likes of lynn doesnt apply in the same way.
Quote:
Originally Posted by NotoriouSH
FRM is a softer material, forged pistons cause scoring in the cylinder bores. There's probably a lot of weird chemistry involved with the different materials but forged pistons have been tried with the FRM liners before and it didn't work out very well!
<snip>
The scoring has to do with the shape of the skirts and the additional thermal expansion a forged piston has. Generally, you run larger clearances with a forged piston, which causes the piston to rock when cold, which causes the skirts to come in contact with the cylinder walls.
The S2k and NSX 3.2L have forged pistons with FRM bores, and have no problems. The real key is to look at the metulurgy of OEM pistons for those engines, as well as skirt shape and factory clearances. The S2000 is probably the better engine to look at, seeing how it has (with the 2.2) similar stroke and bore to the H22. I've seen "spoon" s2k pistons, and they appeared to have some coating on the skirts- this may be important.
DFECTED wrote:So are the bores alloy?
Its the rings that wear the bores anyway! the pistons dont touch the cylinder walls.
Usually forged pistons need more clearance than a normal piston due to the way they grow when it heats up
fivebob wrote:Here's the pistons you need
http://www.monkeywrenchracing.com/mahle_piston_set_toyota_2zz_ge.html
Dragger_Dan wrote:Now IIRC the Toyota Racing Series cars are stock spec motors with dry sumps and intake/exhaust?
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