1965 Seven S2
Mazzini wrote:Very nice! It's better than anything that ever came out of Lotus/Ford.
Ha! I certainly spent more time on it than they did! A bit silly, to some extent, but while apart might as well clean, paint, and replenish. Won't look that good for long!
Henry
69 Elan S4
65 Seven S2
69 Elan S4
65 Seven S2
- SENC
- Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1017
- Joined: 30 Dec 2015
I think I'm good, Robin, but as you know you always find something along the way... but hopefully getting in the short rows now. It will be next week before I have a window to get back to it, but maybe I can get the head back on before the end of next week and begin the larger reassembly process.
The rear camshaft journal had a very slight out of round condition at about its midpoint. If I shifted the camshaft deeper (half the journal extending beyond the block) or shallower (not fully inserted) it would spin ok - but not in the correct location. On close inspection there appeared to be some signs of stress at a couple opposing positions (diametrically) at about that same equatorial range. That was creating the notchiness we were feeling, which combined with new bearing s with no wear to make it very tight and notch.
On offering the new camshaft, notchiness went away but tightness increased significantly - partially a sign of the wear on the original but also because the monkeying around I'd done with the original had caused imperfections in the bearings. I ended up having the machine shop replace the front bearing again and after a touch of scorchbrite cleanup on the rear bearing the new camshaft slid right in and behaves as expected. I'm quite confident the original would now also slide in and spin easily and that I may not even notice the notchiness as the new one may have expanded that bearing a smidge.
The rear camshaft journal had a very slight out of round condition at about its midpoint. If I shifted the camshaft deeper (half the journal extending beyond the block) or shallower (not fully inserted) it would spin ok - but not in the correct location. On close inspection there appeared to be some signs of stress at a couple opposing positions (diametrically) at about that same equatorial range. That was creating the notchiness we were feeling, which combined with new bearing s with no wear to make it very tight and notch.
On offering the new camshaft, notchiness went away but tightness increased significantly - partially a sign of the wear on the original but also because the monkeying around I'd done with the original had caused imperfections in the bearings. I ended up having the machine shop replace the front bearing again and after a touch of scorchbrite cleanup on the rear bearing the new camshaft slid right in and behaves as expected. I'm quite confident the original would now also slide in and spin easily and that I may not even notice the notchiness as the new one may have expanded that bearing a smidge.
Henry
69 Elan S4
65 Seven S2
69 Elan S4
65 Seven S2
- SENC
- Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1017
- Joined: 30 Dec 2015
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