TheRookie65
NEWBIE
I've been reading through this thread and comparing the photographs from the old and new pistons. It appears the new pistons have a dry film coating applied to them, and this makes them look darker than the old pistons. Dry film lubricant is usually a molybdenum disulfide coating which helps reduce scuffing of the piston skirt, as it lowers the coefficient of friction. Both pistons appear to be squeezed formed hypereutectic pistons. The differences in the ring lands is interesting. I used to work at Cummins engine and did a lot of work on piston coatings and mechanical properties of different piston manufacturing methods. Anyone from Ford online that can explain the reason for the additional land?
I would also be interested in seeing 30X magnification photographs of the damaged V8 blocks and pistons. I perform metallurgical failure analyses for a living and recently helped one vendor analyze problems with their aluminum driveshafts, resulting in an improved product, and more competition for 2011+ V6 mustangs.
Was this you? http://v6mustangperformance.com/news/shaftmasters-3-7l-mustang-driveshaft-issues-resolved/