DiMora
More Is Better
So your 302E did consume oil at first? How bad was it? How did you break-in the motor?
I truly hope I'm in the same situation where the engine seals up or stops consuming oil by 10K miles.
Bruce: I have Ford Racing valve covers. I do not know what PCV system is has as I did not install them; came with the long block.
Originally I was planning to put a breather/catch can setup on the motor, but the builder highly advised against it informing me that the PCV system would not pull oil into the intake. Well, it currently does and more than I care for. If I take the throttle body off, there is always a little pool of oil in the elbow where the throttle body bolts onto; the elbow is coated in oil.
Damn...you guys have officially freaked me out!!!! Tearing up the engine is not an option. sigh
OK, so plugs look very clean. No fouling!! If rings were not seated, would the plugs be wet or show signs of oil burning?
I am curious about doing a compression and leak down test. But I need to research how to do this properly.
This is depressing because I had lengthy conversations with the builder about break-in procedures.
A lot of people told me to break in the motor aggressively...just hammer the throttle. But the builder highly advised against it. Saying just drive her easy.
The other issue was that I could not drive the motor aggressively since the tune was not proven. Fueling, timing, etc were not dialed in; all I had was pretty much a start up tune to crank the engine and drive it easy. I did not go WOT for months later after the tune got dialed in. The motor did a lot of idling and easy driving sorting out the tune.
Break-in was as follows:
25 min initial start up where I just cranked the engine and let it run for 25 mins until the cooling fan turned on, then off.
Changed oil.
Drove it for 489 miles (easy driving due to tune).
Changed oil.
Drove it for 3,700 miles (dyno runs, lots of 3rd gear pulls, pretty much dialed in the tune). Also was informed by the builder that I should have never changed out the oil at 489 miles. They said I should have left the oil in and let it get dirty which is when the rings would have seated; then dumped it at 3,000 miles. I thought I was doing good by making sure to dump the oil at 500 miles to eliminate any metal in the oil.
Changed oil.
This is where we are today. Motor only has 4,000 miles since start up on December 23rd.
You didn't harm a thing changing the oil at 500 miles; many builders suggest that. JDM is making early excuses in case they have to tell you you are screwed if it ends up burning a quart every thousand miles. Dirty oil is not for break in; the cross hatching on the cylinder bores interacts (wears the edges) of the rings as they heat and cool while being loaded up (acceleration and deceleration). That is why no-load steady cruising (at constant RPM) is so bad for a new engine...it doesn't "load" the rings and they fail to wear and seat correctly.
The bigger issue was that you had such a poor tune you could not properly load up the rings with acceleration and deceleration to properly break in the rings during the earlay stages of its life, which is critical.
As stated, you may still be OK as your mileage increases, but if you have already done dyno pulls and you have that many miles, I am thinking you may be where you are going to be.
That is great advice to check compression as that will tell you a lot.
Since you are based on a 4.6 block you should only need a catch can on the driver's side.
Clean plugs are a good sign that it *may* not be oil getting past the rings. If the plugs are clean and the compression checks good...it's probably just a blow-by oil consumption issue.
Here's a fun read to really confuse you. I believe in this:
http://www.mototuneusa.com/break_in_secrets.htm
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