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honed cylinders - do I have to replace piston rings?
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honed cylinders - do I have to replace piston rings?
My piston rings all measured within spec but I wasn't sure if you're supposed to change all the rings if you hone the cylinders. What do you all think?Tags: None
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Since you're in there, why not?NO PIC THANKS TO FOTO BUCKET FOR BEING RIDICULOUS
Current Rides: 1980 Suzuki GS1000ET, 2009 Yamaha FZ1, 1983 Honda CB1100F, 2006 H-D Fatboy
Previous Rides: 1972 Yamaha DS7, 1977 Yamaha RD400D, '79 RD400F Daytona Special, '82 RD350LC, 1980 Suzuki GS1000E (sold that one), 1982 Honda CB900F, 1984 Kawasaki GPZ900R
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sharpy
You dont have to, but why hone it if ure not. Hoping ure not going to use same theory and NOT use new gaskets
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Call Me Ahab
Originally posted by Ecklund View PostAgreed.
Especially as the cylinders are now honed. New rings will probably seal better than 30 plus y/o rings.
A tip from an old racing guy was to buy one size over and file them back to min gap.
Good thought, but not totally necessary. If this is the first time the cylinders have been honed, and you don't have 50k+ miles on your bike, you likely don't need oversized rings. I replaced the rings on 2 bikes - 81 1000, and an 82 850. Both had roughly 30k miles, first hone / deglaze ever. I did not have them oversized, and the(NEW) OEM size rings went back in perfectly. No file or gap required (except on a defective ring, but other than being too tight, perfect!) and when I fired the bike up, I was back to 140lbs of compression =]
My recommendation would be to ask whomever honed your cylinders if he used an oversized hone, if he did then yes, step up. If not, go original. Or just ask him to measure your cylinders
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Ecklund
Originally posted by Call Me Ahab View PostEDIT : For clarification. YES to replace - MAYBE to oversize!
Good thought, but not totally necessary. If this is the first time the cylinders have been honed, and you don't have 50k+ miles on your bike, you likely don't need oversized rings. I replaced the rings on 2 bikes - 81 1000, and an 82 850. Both had roughly 30k miles, first hone / deglaze ever. I did not have them oversized, and the(NEW) OEM size rings went back in perfectly. No file or gap required (except on a defective ring, but other than being too tight, perfect!) and when I fired the bike up, I was back to 140lbs of compression =]
My recommendation would be to ask whomever honed your cylinders if he used an oversized hone, if he did then yes, step up. If not, go original. Or just ask him to measure your cylinders
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1_v8_merc
Really comes down to how much this guy honed your cylinder. Some peoples definition of "hone" is a light hone, while other people's definition might be to go crazy, and it turns into a Bore. hehe Then you're forced to buy rings that are one-step up.
You really need to measure the bore.(with proper tool)
Then, measure each rings "free-state" end-gap.
Then, measure each rings end-gap when placed into cylinder.
(you only test the Middle and Top rings, bottom one is Oil Ring obviously.)
The suzuki manual shows all the pictures and specs, you can do the quick math, and figure out how good your compression will likely be. 90% of the time, your rings will be perfectly fine. I've measured plenty of suzuki rings, even after 30 years, most of them have low mileage and barely noticeable wear. So if he lightly honed them, and your Ring-gap is at least Half-way in the spec range, you should be fine.
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Forum LongTimerGSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter
Super Site Supporter- Mar 2006
- 35641
- Torrance, CA
I agree with Ray. Oversize rings are to be used with oversize pistons after a bore job. No other application for them.Ed
To measure is to know.
Mikuni O-ring Kits For Sale...https://www.thegsresources.com/_foru...ts#post1703182
Top Newbie Mistakes thread...http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=171846
Carb rebuild tutorial...https://gsarchive.bwringer.com/mtsac...d_Tutorial.pdf
KZ750E Rebuild Thread...http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...0-Resurrection
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TopTechRacing
You really want to measure the bore clearance and compare to the factory spec. If it is with in the maximum then I would replace the rings with the proper factory size. I would also purchase the rings and have the cylinders honed to the ring manufactures recommended finish. The job will be much better if these things are done. When you measure the bore be sure to check the bores for round and taper also. I have no idea what a set of bike rings are but its gotta be cheaper than the time it takes to pull the cylinders off one of these engines.
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TheDuke
Originally posted by 1_v8_merc View PostReally comes down to how much this guy honed your cylinder. Some peoples definition of "hone" is a light hone, while other people's definition might be to go crazy, and it turns into a Bore. hehe Then you're forced to buy rings that are one-step up.
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Call Me Ahab
Originally posted by TheDuke View PostThanks for the all the advice. And, I didn't have A guy do the job, THIS GUY did the job in his shed while burning the midnight oil; but, I didn't go too crazy, just until the walls looked clean again. I will double check all my measurements in the AM and go from there. The bike has around 30k miles, but my first pass at measuring the rings had them all well within spec. Just wasn't sure if it was necessary to spend the $150 for peace of mind.
I sincerely hope it went well, be sure to wipe down the cylinder walls with some clean oil.
Good luck with your continued efforts, have a great week.
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koolaid_kid
If the stock rings seem fine, just get new stock rings, measure/file for clearance, and use them.
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