Thanks for furthering my pointalso at the high of a rpm you have to have the head and block built for that, and really you dont make that much power at that high. your peak power is made below 10k normally. its kind of a waste
Thanks for furthering my pointalso at the high of a rpm you have to have the head and block built for that, and really you dont make that much power at that high. your peak power is made below 10k normally. its kind of a waste
Well I'm some what new to this so any input is good. I don't want to build something that will explode on me. I looked online for motors an found that gsr motors are more common than a type-r. I have a friend that know someone inthe Honda scene that will look out for one unless I get one first. Now that I have a motor in mind I can plan the upgrades from there.Thanks for furthering my point
its more reliable than ls/v due to the rod stroke ratio and if he wants to boost that puts a lot of stress on the cylinder walls.still wondering whats the point in spending the cash on the gsr motor when you're just going to rebuild the entire motor anyway? Everything that makes a gsr a gsr will be replaced minus the oil squirters and vtec (which isn't necessary in the first place)
with a mild build and boost, i could justify the gsr motor...extensively modifying, no.
I'm still unsure about sleeving cause. I hear that people that do end up sleeving end up regretting it but then I hear different on those that do.they really didn't specify about what they had done to their motor if anything at all. I haven't read anything technical about so I'm gonna leave that as in answered for the times being. I didn't forget. I will let you what I read and send links to get feedback. All I want to do is get it right the first time and not spend more cash on another motor by doing something wrong. I have seen some where that some b series motor has a built in oil cooler but don't know the exact one. But is that a good also.... cause if so would like to putits more reliable than ls/v due to the rod stroke ratio and if he wants to boost that puts a lot of stress on the cylinder walls.
he still hasnt answered if he wants to sleeve or not which is why i recommended the gsr. but i also read somewhere that an oil cooler is built into gsr blocks? not totally sure on that though. if you sleeve you could get away with a reliable ls/v and bore it out to a 2.0
i get that about the LS/VTEC. A straight LS b18b1 completely rebuilt for turbo could yield just as insane of numbers as a built GSR. The GSR doesn't have an oil cooler built in, it has oil squirters.its more reliable than ls/v due to the rod stroke ratio and if he wants to boost that puts a lot of stress on the cylinder walls.
he still hasnt answered if he wants to sleeve or not which is why i recommended the gsr. but i also read somewhere that an oil cooler is built into gsr blocks? not totally sure on that though. if you sleeve you could get away with a reliable ls/v and bore it out to a 2.0
So from what you said with the b16a2 being cheaper I can still achieve my pwr goal still swap my internals . Also with it having thick walls i dont have to sleeve it. I got what your saying. Now when i do change the innards do i go bigger pistions or stay the same size but forged either way.i get that about the LS/VTEC. A straight LS b18b1 completely rebuilt for turbo could yield just as insane of numbers as a built GSR. The GSR doesn't have an oil cooler built in, it has oil squirters.
Even a B16a2 rebuilt and boosted can get in the 500hp club no problem. CFT has done a bunch and a few others who started out with the simple b16 swap and wanted more power. The b16 also has the thickest cylinder walls. I only suggest the cheaper starting point just because it would be a waste of money if the internals are yanked and replaced.
With the pistons is up to your choice. You can go with a factory spec sized piston or slight overbore since the cylinders will be honed, or even jump up 1800cc displacement without having the extra long stroke so you can retain some of those high revs you want without having insane piston speeds.So from what you said with the b16a2 being cheaper I can still achieve my pwr goal still swap my internals . Also with it having thick walls i dont have to sleeve it. I got what your saying. Now when i do change the innards do i go bigger pistions or stay the same size but forged either way.
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So do I build it to suite forced induction or build it all out (all motor) then boost itWith the pistons is up to your choice. You can go with a factory spec sized piston or slight overbore since the cylinders will be honed, or even jump up 1800cc displacement without having the extra long stroke so you can retain some of those high revs you want without having insane piston speeds.
When and how you make your power will determine most of your build.
Absolutely. I got the boost bug when I drove my buddies twin Turbo supra. But never had the cash to do my own .....till now. 311. )(ddfBuild for boost if you for sure boosting it.