No life (a.k.a. DattoMaster)
Joined: 2008/10/10 22:02
From Melbourne Australia (and likely under the car)
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The biggest gains in longevity as far as engines go specifically, is the improvements in oil technology, and primarily engine management. More precise fuel metering means less excess fuel in the cylinders. This is typically attributed to things like washing away the micro oil film on the bores, esp with cold starts, but from info I've been shown more recently, it's just as like combustion byproduct contamination and it's exposure to the cylinder walls (and possibly getting into the oil past the rings. Noticeably, lpg powered engines, properly built will last as long or longer than even efi engines.
I'm not totally sold on the rust thing. I used to have arguments in aus.cars in the mid-late 90s about this, as people wre claiming that new cars (for the time, EA/B fords) weren't going to rust like earlier cars have. I made the point that it was only because they were still new enough that rust wasn't appearing. I also made a bit of a case for the fact that a lot less cars were likely garaged in the 70s, and by the time a car gets 10-15 years old, even if the house has a garage, usually the 'newer' car goes in there and the old datto (or whatever) that is now driven by the teenage kids gets parked out in the elements. Looking at things now, tehre's no shortage of vn/ea falcadores with what is close to terminal rust.
I'm not suggesting that the dattos are indestructible, but they ain't too bad I think. my main coupe is now over 40 years old and whilst the paint has finally faded and there's just not enough left to cut it a further time, aside from a few small spots of surface rust, it doesn't actually have significant or 'real' rust anywhere at all. It's fairing a lot better than any valiant or torana built around the same, with similar garage/carport history.
Posted on: 2014/6/3 17:41
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