Okay guys, I did watch the video and what I saw, here we go, are you ready?!?
Melted the top of the piston first, right- we can all agree on that, next, and this is simple metallurgical engineering, the excessive heat causes strain hardening and stress fractures to find the path of least resistance. Once you had heat able to get by the rings from the melted ring land, it all went down hill from there...
ringlands don't just kill themselves- think what you want but I still hold my argument.
Piston skirts are not designed to handle load, the top of the piston is, so when you allow cylinder pressures to get past the face of the piston, stresses occur as well as lots of heat. Heat treatments of aluminum and most other materials make them more brittle, so- you take a material not designed to take loads, make it brittle, and heat it up, it's gunna crack.
Is it maybe a casting flaw? Maybe, but at the end of the day the face of the piston melted. That's where the problems started
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Mason you clearly have zero clue and experience in engines. I really wish you would spend the time trying to educate and get experience than tarnish someone's name. I have close to 500-600ebgine builds over 13year span. Let break down your "theory" and "assumptions"
"Melted the top of the piston first, right- we can all agree on that, next, and this is simple metallurgical engineering, the excessive heat causes strain hardening and stress fractures to find the path of least resistance. Once you had heat able to get by the rings from the melted ring land, it all went down hill from there... "
Anytime the top of a piston melts first it's because the high combustion gas and air fuel mix has a path to least resistance. When this happens it's a torch and causes a lot of damage and clear tell tale signs.
High temps, to much timing, to lean cause things like pre ignition to happen. Pre ignition means a flame front developed not from the spark plug. The the spark plug light this cause two flame fronts to collide and when it does cylinder pressure spikes are huge! This cause the piston to rock hard back and forth fast.
The piston above is the one out of my personal shop car. Stock engine and made 430-440whp when this happened. You can see small dots and wear marks on thrust and anti thrust sides the wear in the cylinder wall confirmed this. The piston was rocking hard in the bore during this and temps and pressure reached a point that it torched and melted fast and hot. Also typically bad tune melting a piston always go path of least resistance like here where it's in the thin exhaust pocket. This is a tune that was to aggressive.
"ringlands don't just kill themselves- think what you want but I still hold my argument."
These are two different engines that had ring land failures under low load on stock or
Minor bolt on cars during cruising. This is 2.0 EcoBoost and a very common issue. So common ford has recognized this and it's ver similar to the common subaru issues. Also they are the same piston manufacturer.
These engines did not melt the top and had near perfect compression but only found this issue when a leak down test was completed.
"Piston skirts are not designed to handle load, the top of the piston is, so when you allow cylinder pressures to get past the face of the piston, stresses occur as well as lots of heat. Heat treatments of aluminum and most other materials make them more brittle, so- you take a material not designed to take loads, make it brittle, and heat it up, it's gunna crack. "
Here we have a 3.5 EcoBoost with the same skirt and pin boss design and same piston manufacturer and clearly see the skirt is broke and fractured in the same TRUST side.
http://speed.academy/pri-spotlight-je-pistons-asymmetrical-piston-design/
Here is a article as to what asymmetrical piston skirts are and the big load differences are.
Any time heat get past the 1st land and causes things to let like I stated above it causes a toruch and damages and leaves CLEAR damage on the skirts and/or cylinder walls. Bellow is examples of that.
This is 1.6 EcoBoost that was pushed to hard and you can see the dome that is melted and rounded over this is a Heat issue.
I will end with [MENTION=1650]Pete[/MENTION] 's engine was a clear piston failure. Anyone with really engine experience will agree.
Thank you
Russ
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