No life (a.k.a. DattoMaster) 
Joined: 2008/10/10 22:02
From Melbourne Australia (and likely under the car)
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I probably wouldn't bother (speaking for me personally) but if I got a set with lightened pins, done right, I wouldn't turn them away either.
Generally speaking they size the pin diameter/thickness to suit the usage. So you can't 'go nuts' about it. BUT what you can do is machine the pins on a taper, so they are full thickness in the middle and slightly thinner as you travel out to the ends. By the end of it all, i don't know what you'd save weight wize, but it'd be a couple of grams tops I suspect).
I'd also go further and say it's probably only warranted if the rpms are really high and each gram counts.
I believe you'd get a much bigger weight reduction polishing the side of the rod beams flat, and cutting away nearly all of the balance weight region on the little end of the rod and on the rod cap. Basically reducing it all so they are all evenly balanced with one another, but with one rod taken right to the limit fo the weight reduction.
In other words you weigh all the rods, big and little ends, and the heaviest ones to start with, you take the most material off, until they become the lightest, then you machine down all the others to this new reduced weight. And you repeat that, a bit at a time, until one fo the rods is just about out of material on that 'pad' that is there to be machined off as needed for balancing purposes (and not all rods have a lot of material in that respect). Start before that by polishing the sides of the beams. It'll drop a few grams, but most importantly (if done carefully) this will remove any surface irregularities, and actually make the rod stronger rather than weaker (obviously you 'go with the grain' so to speak - polish up and down the rod beam, not across it.)
balancing the rods is definitely something you can diy, and diy to accuracies of closer than 1 gram (probably closer than half a gram) - by simply making a 'balance' scale setup, using a slightly undersize piston pin and a few bits and pieces - you compare one rod to another, on each side of this 'scale' then remove material till they balance (and then swap ends to compare the other end of each rod to one another) then swap in one new rod, and repeat, until all 4 are the same. It doesn't matter (at this stage) 'what' they weigh, as such, just that they are all the same. Obviously when someone professional is then given the job of matching crank counterweights to it, they'll measure the rod weights, but you'll still save some decent money by doing the rods yourself.
Obviously if you need new rod bolts installed (and esp if you are going from stock/old rod bolts to new arp ones, which will alter the clamping force) - it's good practice to get the big ends closed and honed (they machine a couple of thou off the rod cap mating faces, then install the new bolts, torque them up (and the new clamping force will alter rod big end distortion a little) and then they final hone it to the right size to have the right radial tension/rod bearing crush) - anyhoo - if you are having new bolts, get em re-co'd, it's well worth the effort on a high rpm setup.
Posted on: 2012/2/8 6:56
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