Current best dyno power figure:
218.7 kw @ rear wheels
Current best quarter mile:

15.0 seconds @ 98mph

 

 

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Unfortunately the engine in my grey 180sx expired due to a spun big end bearing. This page serves as a guide for what to expect if you are rebuilding an SR20. Obviously some of the prices will be different depending on wher parts are sourced from and where the work is done, but the data still stands as a record of my experience.

The Story

After driving the car home from work for 15mins in a very slow and subdud manner, I gave the car a few seconds of straight line boosting, after which I heard a rattle/clacking sound from the engine bay intermittently. The sounds occured only on low load and low rpm to begin with, so I thought not much of it, and used the car over the next day to run some errans for a hour or so. The car was not down on power but the sound was getting a little more frequent. I did a compression test to try and work out what was going on, and scored an excellent ~160psi on all four cylinders.

The next day I left to go on a long journey and things got a lot worse. Grinding sounds and louder rattling started coming from the engine bay, so I liped the car to a nearby mechanic, who informed me it was a big end bearing. Although I was only a few hundred metres from home a lot of damage was done on this trip. The engine sounds like a few rocksbeing shaken in a tin jar, and cut out at ~60km/h several times. By the time I got home a minute or so later it was extremely noisy and would not idle. I switched the engine off and let the car rest from there.

The Damage

I had the car towed down to Ricol Automotive in Peakhurst, (IDA sponsors) after discussing the problem with the boys at a IDA event at Oran Park. A few days later they returned the news that not ony did the bearings need replacing, but other parts of the engine needed repairing or replacement due to the fact that metallic particles from the destroyed bearing were pumped through the lubrication system. It seems that short drive home did a lot of damage. Bad news also was tht the compression was now all over the place, meaning the piston rings had been damaged by the nasty oil as well. The entire engine needed to be chemically cleaned to remove the foreign particles, and items such as a new oil pump were required. The original crank was damaged too, and was probably best replaced. Tragically my newish HKS camshafts had also been scored, but were savable with a clean up.

The car sitting in Ricol with the engine in pieces, not a pretty sight.

 

The engine laid out in pieces on the floor.

 

The old damaged bearings. Notice scoring, especially on the furthest most right hand bearing.

 

Crank scoring where the damaged bearing was located.

 

HKS camshafts. Notice the scoring on every lobe from bad oil particles.

 

The Cause

Ricol said that there was a lot of thick oil buildup on the inside of the engine suggesting that poor maintenance had been undertaken in the past. I know the previous owner serviced the motor religiously but had a bearing replaced under warranty after hearinga slight knock when he first received the car. Most probable is that the car dealership did the quickest, cheaperst job they could, only replacing the bearing and not bothering to clean out the oil buildup which caused the problem in the first place. Which meant a ticking time bomb that went off just after I took ownership of the car :(

 

The Bill

The actual bill from Ricol, only the numberplates removed from top right.

So in addition to these parts the following were required:

 

Labor Required

Obviously there is going to be a great deal of labor is any case from the process of pulling the engine out and down, as well as putting everything else back together. The following is specific to my case but may still apply to others.

 

The Total Cost

With the $3075 bill from Ricol plus $80 for bearings, $250 for crank and $300 for headgasket, the total cost of my rebuild comes to $3705.

So I am left with a basically brand new engine with factory specs. I'd say the compression is up a little bit from the machining of the head block with still factory thickness headgasket, so probably why it feels so damn responsive. Expensive yes compared to the cost of installing another second hand engine but at least now I know I have a sound package ready for track time.

Everything back except for strut brace which needs to be picked up from a friend's place.

 

BOV installation is very very neat.

 

How a manifold looks after sitting doing nothing for months.

 

Ricol Dyno vs. Unigroup Dyno Post Rebuild

Previously a bigger gap has existing between the two dynos, but with these tests they are at ther moment at least very similar. It is very possible that something has been altered at Unigroup to make their dyno read a little lower than before, because another car made 13rwkw less than his previous visit with no changes at all.

The engine should make more power after a little while when it has lossened up. Now it is classed at a 'tight' motor being freshly rebuilt/ Despite all of this the car to me feels faster than ever before, so who knows what is really going on.

One strange thing is the shape of the power curves differ quite a bit between the two dynos. The Ricol graph climbs in power steadily before dropping just before the end of the run, where as the Unigroup graph shows an early peak and drop off of power. On the road the response feels more like the Ricol graph, with power staying strong the whole way.

 

 

 

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Copyright M. Laws 2003.