YAMAJOHNNY
New member
I just finished putting in a replated jug from Millenium & 2 new SPI pistons on my 96 600. The failure was caused by a dirty carb. After assembly, it fired right up, ran smooth, no weird noises, YES!. However, after about 5 minutes of running, the side with the new jug was noticeably warmer than the side with just the new piston. I had .005 piston clearance with the new jug, & .007 with the old jug. Ring end gap on both was .015. It was not hot enough to burn my hand, but "warmer". Is this something normal due to break in, or am I a little tight on this side? Thanks in advance.
daman
New member
where did you get your clearance specs from??
did you bleed the coolant to get out air bubbles.Maxdlx
YAMAJOHNNY
New member
The guy @ Millenium told me .004 to .006 per inch of bore for end gap. 3" bore = .012 min. end gap. The sheet that came with the pistons said .004 to .006 piston clearance. I thought I was on the money there. Cooling system was bled. Am I screwed???
daman
New member
well because you used SPI aftermarket pistons and rings you may be okYAMAJOHNNY said:The guy @ Millenium told me .004 to .006 per inch of bore for end gap. 3" bore = .012 min. end gap. The sheet that came with the pistons said .004 to .006 piston clearance. I thought I was on the money there. Cooling system was bled. Am I screwed???
i don't know the expansion rate. i was just crossing it over to yamahas
stock specs and your on the tight side for sure. but if thats what they
told you to use run her..
YAMAJOHNNY
New member
Thanks daman, I'll give her a shot. You know they make pistons every day, thats my way of supporting the economy & the snowmobile industry.(LOL)
daman
New member
good man..