Zilvia.net Forums | Nissan 240SX (Silvia) and Z (Fairlady) Car Forum

Go Back   Zilvia.net Forums | Nissan 240SX (Silvia) and Z (Fairlady) Car Forum > General > Tech Talk > Engine Tech

Engine Tech Technical discussion related to all relevant engines such as KA, SR, RB, CA, 2JZ , L24/26/28, VG, VQ, and LSx series.


Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 01-20-2020, 09:22 PM   #1
Hoffman5982
Nissanaholic!
 
Hoffman5982's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Definitely NOT FL....
Age: 29
Posts: 2,491
Trader Rating: (25)
Hoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really nice
Feedback Score: 25 reviews
Is the timing in my tune too aggressive?

I know this is a longshot, but I know nothing about tuning and just got yet another cracked ringland on my freshly rebuilt ka-t running only 8-9psi. It was running 14-16psi when originally tuned but handled it great until I blew the headgasket and kept driving because I thought it was just air in the system. This last instance, the motor was freshly rebuilt with new rings and bearing. I compression tested it a month ago, 750 miles in and it made 190psi across the board. Last night I drove to a friends, didn't beat on it or anything, and when I went to leave I immediately noticed it sounded down a cylinder while turning over. Sure enough, I tested it today and it made 190-185-190-115. I've suspected my tune my be an issue, but it ran absolutely fine with no detonation or knock. I also figured by lowering the boost I wouldn't have an issue.

So, rambling aside, I plan to have it retuned once fixed, but I'm really curious to know if my timing is too aggressive or if there's anything that stands out on my Nismotronic tune. My setup is stock ka, STI 525cc injectors, twisted motion 2871 turbo, speed density, and typical bolt ons. Thanks in advance.

My Tune
__________________
Hoffman5982 is offline   Reply With Quote
Sponsored Links
Old 01-20-2020, 09:54 PM   #2
nick_d_240sx
Leaky Injector
 
nick_d_240sx's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2017
Location: Oregon
Age: 39
Posts: 64
Trader Rating: (0)
nick_d_240sx is an unknown quantity at this point
Feedback Score: 0 reviews
I don't know much about ka-t.
Screenshot of your timing map from your TCD.


After doing some reading on KA-T timing you're values seem about right, and since you had it tuned professionally I'll assume they had some way to read knock. I'd rely that they backed it off from any knock threshold vs. my uneducated internet opinion.

Sorry, not much help. Good luck!
__________________
1990 240SX SR20DET GTX2863R

Last edited by nick_d_240sx; 01-21-2020 at 08:23 AM..
nick_d_240sx is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-21-2020, 08:30 AM   #3
jedi03
Nissanaholic!
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: albuquerque
Posts: 1,786
Trader Rating: (8)
jedi03 is on a distinguished road
Feedback Score: 8 reviews
whats your CR and which pistons are you using?
jedi03 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-21-2020, 02:25 PM   #4
Hoffman5982
Nissanaholic!
 
Hoffman5982's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Definitely NOT FL....
Age: 29
Posts: 2,491
Trader Rating: (25)
Hoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really nice
Feedback Score: 25 reviews
Quote:
Originally Posted by nick_d_240sx View Post
I don't know much about ka-t.
Screenshot of your timing map from your TCD.


After doing some reading on KA-T timing you're values seem about right, and since you had it tuned professionally I'll assume they had some way to read knock. I'd rely that they backed it off from any knock threshold vs. my uneducated internet opinion.

Sorry, not much help. Good luck!
Thank you for getting a screenshot before I could! During tuning he said it never registered any knock. During logs the knock count has always shown zero. I assume my knock sensor and wiring is all good. I know I've checked it for cracks and whatnot but I'll ohm test it when I get the motor out.

Quote:
Originally Posted by jedi03 View Post
whats your CR and which pistons are you using?
They are stock pistons. The motor is completely stock internally. I just did a hone, new rings, and had the crank checked and polished and new bearings. The only "crazy" thing I have going on is 248/232 cams which were on there when it was tuned. Since the original tune I haven't changed anything about the setup.
__________________
Hoffman5982 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-21-2020, 03:09 PM   #5
brndck
Premium Member
 
brndck's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: torrance, ca
Age: 39
Posts: 12,407
Trader Rating: (129)
brndck is close to perfectionbrndck is close to perfectionbrndck is close to perfectionbrndck is close to perfectionbrndck is close to perfectionbrndck is close to perfectionbrndck is close to perfectionbrndck is close to perfectionbrndck is close to perfectionbrndck is close to perfectionbrndck is close to perfection
Feedback Score: 129 reviews
Send a message via AIM to brndck
first things first, do a leakdown to confirm that the low compression is caused by the rings, and not a damaged valve or valve seat.

once you get the head off you can see if theres damage to the piston (i'm thinking maybe you have an injector that's clogged/failed, causing that cyl to run way lean)

do you have any provisions to adjust the timing on the cam gears? JWT gears?
__________________

http://outslidersandsmokeproduce.blogspot.com/
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mannykiller View Post
it'll fit JANK.. and no one likes Jank except Broke ass zilvians.
brndck is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-21-2020, 03:20 PM   #6
Hoffman5982
Nissanaholic!
 
Hoffman5982's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Definitely NOT FL....
Age: 29
Posts: 2,491
Trader Rating: (25)
Hoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really nice
Feedback Score: 25 reviews
Quote:
Originally Posted by brndck View Post
first things first, do a leakdown to confirm that the low compression is caused by the rings, and not a damaged valve or valve seat.

once you get the head off you can see if theres damage to the piston (i'm thinking maybe you have an injector that's clogged/failed, causing that cyl to run way lean)

do you have any provisions to adjust the timing on the cam gears? JWT gears?
I'll try to do a leakdown test this weekend. This is the 3rd time I've had a cracked ringland and the sound when turning over was the dead giveaway each time so I'm pretty confident that it's that, but it never hurts to check. I should also note that the compression jumped to 150 with a good amount of oil in the cylinder. It could very well be an injector. I plan to get a retune after this and was going to send my Sard 770s off to be cleaned and flow tested. What signs would indicate that? All I can tell you right now is that the cylinder tops all look consistent and not oily and all 4 plugs look the same and not bad(a little carbon buildup around the edge and grey tip). I've never had any sign of detonation whatsoever. I may also throw on an adjustable FPR to rule that out.
__________________
Hoffman5982 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-22-2020, 05:46 PM   #7
S14rebuild
BANNED
 
Join Date: May 2019
Location: Florida-FAIL
Posts: 2,497
Trader Rating: (8)
S14rebuild S14rebuild S14rebuild S14rebuild S14rebuild S14rebuild S14rebuild S14rebuild S14rebuild S14rebuild S14rebuild
Feedback Score: 8 reviews
Said its the 3rd cracked ringland u had...is it always the same cylinder?


And at this point why not just invest in some aftermarket pistons n rods?

Seems like a waste to keep pulln motors and keep rebuilding with oem internals
S14rebuild is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-23-2020, 08:03 AM   #8
tuzzio
Nissanaholic!
 
tuzzio's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: Western Mass.
Posts: 2,254
Trader Rating: (3)
tuzzio has a reputation beyond reputetuzzio has a reputation beyond reputetuzzio has a reputation beyond reputetuzzio has a reputation beyond reputetuzzio has a reputation beyond reputetuzzio has a reputation beyond reputetuzzio has a reputation beyond reputetuzzio has a reputation beyond reputetuzzio has a reputation beyond reputetuzzio has a reputation beyond reputetuzzio has a reputation beyond repute
Feedback Score: 3 reviews
I'll have to pull my timing table later, but thats pretty conservative for timing.
tuzzio is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-27-2020, 09:59 PM   #9
Hoffman5982
Nissanaholic!
 
Hoffman5982's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Definitely NOT FL....
Age: 29
Posts: 2,491
Trader Rating: (25)
Hoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really nice
Feedback Score: 25 reviews
Quote:
Originally Posted by S14rebuild View Post
Said its the 3rd cracked ringland u had...is it always the same cylinder?


And at this point why not just invest in some aftermarket pistons n rods?

Seems like a waste to keep pulln motors and keep rebuilding with oem internals
I actually did buy some second hand forged rods and pistons and got screwed over on the deal by a local big shot so the motor didn't last long. On top of that, it'd be wasted with my power goal. When it was originally tuned it made 292whp and if anything I want to turn it down. Drifting on 15's with the narrow selection of tires I have available with that amount of power is overkill. On a kart track I could pretty much keep it in 3rd and just clutch kick once or twice. That's cool and all but feels more like driving on ice. I think ~250whp would be perfect and a stock ka, muchless a rebuilt one with perfect compression, should handle that no problem

As for the original question, no. It has never been the same cylinder. The first time was I believe number 3, second time number 1, and this time number 4. Until now I had assumed it was due to driving with a blown headgasket. The first time the car hit, according to nismotronic, 380F mid run. After that there was constant smoke out the pcv and the motor shot out a bunch of oil at the next event after replacing the head gasket. The second, which was the last event I drove, the head gasket didn't make a spectacular blowout like the time before but it started idling at 200F and would climb as soon as I started driving, came to find out there were combustion gases in the coolant. It had been hitting 240F throughout the day after multiple lap runs, which seems normal for ka's, but by the end was taking longer and long to cool back down until it didn't cool down at all. This time it was completely out of nowhere. Since this refresh and installing a swirl pot the motor hasn't seen over 160F and I'm also running MLS hg and ARP studs this time around.

I'm still going to get a retune. I figure the issue has to be fuel or tune related so I will change both. I'm also going to replace my o2 sensor for the wideband just to ensure that's working correctly
__________________
Hoffman5982 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-28-2020, 10:02 AM   #10
jr_ss
Post Whore!
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Pa
Posts: 6,056
Trader Rating: (34)
jr_ss is just really nicejr_ss is just really nicejr_ss is just really nicejr_ss is just really nicejr_ss is just really nicejr_ss is just really nicejr_ss is just really nicejr_ss is just really nicejr_ss is just really nicejr_ss is just really nice
Feedback Score: 34 reviews
Send a message via AIM to jr_ss
The point of forged pistons isn’t always to make big power. It is for reliability purposes as well. They are far superior for absorbing some of the detonation that comes with bad fuel, or errors in the tune. You can put stock sized forged slugs in and call it good. Worth the investment if you’re opening it up for the 4th time.
__________________
My SR20VET
jr_ss is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-31-2020, 04:53 AM   #11
NukeKS14
Zilvia Member
 
NukeKS14's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2019
Location: KS
Posts: 221
Trader Rating: (1)
NukeKS14 is just really niceNukeKS14 is just really niceNukeKS14 is just really niceNukeKS14 is just really niceNukeKS14 is just really niceNukeKS14 is just really niceNukeKS14 is just really niceNukeKS14 is just really niceNukeKS14 is just really nice
Feedback Score: 1 reviews
Whatre you gapping your rings at? I skimmed and could have missed but you could be causing this running stock gap on the rings.

Just bringing this up as detonation/preignition aren't the only things that cause your ringlands to give up the ghost.

Like another said, time for forgies. I cracked ringlands without causing detonation on my oem slugs. Granted they had a hundred or so thousand miles on your build. The stock cast aluminum pistons in the KA just arent designed for the kind of pressure you subject them to with a turbo on there.

If youre staying under 400 crank hp take the stock rods and have them peened. Theyll hold up fine. If you have any inkling of going over that, just build it now. Id also give calico a call in NC. I had them coat my main and rod bearings. Wasnt much more and a good investment in a motor you're going to be wailing on.
NukeKS14 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-01-2020, 09:10 PM   #12
Hoffman5982
Nissanaholic!
 
Hoffman5982's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Definitely NOT FL....
Age: 29
Posts: 2,491
Trader Rating: (25)
Hoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really niceHoffman5982 is just really nice
Feedback Score: 25 reviews
Quote:
Originally Posted by NukeKS14 View Post
Whatre you gapping your rings at? I skimmed and could have missed but you could be causing this running stock gap on the rings.

Just bringing this up as detonation/preignition aren't the only things that cause your ringlands to give up the ghost.

Like another said, time for forgies. I cracked ringlands without causing detonation on my oem slugs. Granted they had a hundred or so thousand miles on your build. The stock cast aluminum pistons in the KA just arent designed for the kind of pressure you subject them to with a turbo on there.

If youre staying under 400 crank hp take the stock rods and have them peened. Theyll hold up fine. If you have any inkling of going over that, just build it now. Id also give calico a call in NC. I had them coat my main and rod bearings. Wasnt much more and a good investment in a motor you're going to be wailing on.
The rings are NPR which come pre-gapped. That said, after honing they were at the larger end of oem spec. I have it written down somewhere in the garage but something like .020 top ring .024 2nd ring. Larger than originally planned but within spec(barely) and I figured it would only make it safer for boost. Never had any blow-by, but I was surprised to see 190psi across the board.

My power goal is no more than 275whp. I'm heavily contemplating switching to an sr t28 while it's out, so I'm going to stick with stock internals. If it blows again, so be it, I'll just slap a na ka back in and drive it like I used to.

That said, I made an important discovery. My wideband is wired into the nismotronic, so no factory o2. I noticed that what's reported to the ecu is different than what shows on the gauge itself by almost a full number. So when the gauge shows 11.7 WOT the ecu shows ~12.7. I'm assuming what the the ecu is showing is what it actually is, which means it's leaning out. Pretty stupid. I posted on the nismotronic page and the only suggestion I got was to reground it, which I did to no avail. They have since stopped replying over there.
__________________
Hoffman5982 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-02-2020, 05:44 AM   #13
NukeKS14
Zilvia Member
 
NukeKS14's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2019
Location: KS
Posts: 221
Trader Rating: (1)
NukeKS14 is just really niceNukeKS14 is just really niceNukeKS14 is just really niceNukeKS14 is just really niceNukeKS14 is just really niceNukeKS14 is just really niceNukeKS14 is just really niceNukeKS14 is just really niceNukeKS14 is just really nice
Feedback Score: 1 reviews
That cant help (your wideband issue). I think you're pushing the stock pistons up to their bleeding edge. Your rods will hold up just fine but over 300 crank hp you,ve over doubled what they run in factory form. Just my .02 but if it were me I'd do an eigth overbore to control tolerances and get a good set of 9:1 forged pistons in there an never worry about getting in the engine again. Ring gaps dont seem too crazy.

Does nismotronic allow you to program a custom curve in? Usually grounding directly with the ecu ground will align the wideband output with the ecu reading. Weird.
NukeKS14 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-03-2020, 09:38 PM   #14
Kingtal0n
Post Whore!
 
Kingtal0n's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: South Florida
Age: 38
Posts: 4,649
Trader Rating: (17)
Kingtal0n has a reputation beyond reputeKingtal0n has a reputation beyond reputeKingtal0n has a reputation beyond reputeKingtal0n has a reputation beyond reputeKingtal0n has a reputation beyond reputeKingtal0n has a reputation beyond reputeKingtal0n has a reputation beyond reputeKingtal0n has a reputation beyond reputeKingtal0n has a reputation beyond reputeKingtal0n has a reputation beyond reputeKingtal0n has a reputation beyond repute
Feedback Score: 17 reviews
Send a message via AIM to Kingtal0n
according to the table its around 13-15* at 9-11 psi of boost
Which is what i would have used.

However, how do you know the timing is actually staying there at that rpm? Did you ever run the engine to redline on the dyno with a timing light to check? (who does that anyways)

I know that isn't easy to do or always possible. Its just a mental check for you to look into how the dwell and coils are configured. Sometimes it makes a difference.

What you can do however is use the dynojet wideband to verify your own. I think that is very important.

Okay you want to use a cast piston, thats fine. They are great pistons for daily driving because they don't expand much so when you start the engine cold they fit great and the engine keeps it's oil quality up over time.
However if you get cast pistons hot, they expand a bit like any material would, and the cast aluminum is very brittle and easy to break in that state. They already fit tightly and are very easy to overheat. I think this is your issue if you are 'tracking' the car. That is, repeatedly boost back to back. As opposed to say, drag race run followed by a cooldown/shutdown, then another run etc...

Luckily this issue is extremely familiar and easy to correct. You probably need to simply control the piston surface temperature using water injection. Aux 100% distilled water at the correct flow-rate to hold the EGT down below say 1250*F~ pre-turbine should/could solve your problem. The piston/chamber temp getting too hot is what is causing pressure spikes which blow holes in things like head gaskets and pistons. This happens when using poor fuel like gasoline in a hot track setting with no cooling what so ever. EGT climbs rapidly especially when compression is high and engine flow rate goes up due to turbocharging which tends to promote high EGT in the first place. This is compounded further by small-size turbocharging and high exhaust gas pressure (small turbines). In other words, a large/huge turbo with slightly reduced compression would be more tolerant of the heat with the same piston at the same boost pressure. Just sayin' you could take steps, open the cam duration, open the exhaust (tubular or larger) bigger turbo, better intercooling, all of that would help, they all lower EGT/chamber temps.
But the shortest path is water injection.
Kingtal0n is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 03:03 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2021, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
vB.Sponsors
Copyright © 1998 - 2019, Zilvia.net™