I agree with the above and my intention when sharing this info was not to freak everyone out that has an 878 kit + other mods. I am not suggesting that the JE piston design is flawed.coxylaad wrote:woah lets not all jump to conclusions here talking about design flaws of the upgrades that many owners have done with no problems.
I think the key point to focus on here is the fact Phils engine was suffering with low oil pressure from the outset.
Could it be not something as obvious as oil starvation caused by a poor oil pump?
Just seems odd that there are a lot of 878 kitted bikes about that havent had any bother.
That said I doubt I will be doing anything with the internals of my 900 engine. its quick enough on the track for the rider to be the difference.
I am fairly certain revving the bikes hard is not going to kill the engine. mine will be getting a good kicking for the foreseeable future.
Thinking through the varied and interesting comment here I am still trying to conclude the ultimate cause of my small end/piston pin wear which has occurred at quite low mileage.
So far this is where I am (its a bit long winded but my head is spinning with problems and solutions);
My original high mileage tired motor had the 878 in for about 4 track days before fitting FCR's (88rwhp). It was burning some oil and the oil light was on a fair bit at low revs when hot. I ignored this because the switching pressure of the VW pressure switch is less than 1 bar from memory and I did not believe that true pressure could be this low. Typical oil pressures are up at 60psi ish I believe.
The crank then died (LH big end) confirming that I really did have low pressure. Mains and big ends were all very worn (out of spec clearances) and the bores showed wear on the thrust faces at that point. Small end wear meant new rods and pins but when it went together with a new crank, I did not recognise the possible significance of the bore/ring wear (should have addressed this at that time).
Motor then did 5 more track days before the head came off revealing the current wear to what were new small ends/piston pins.
The circlip ends of the piston pins are not damaged significantly indicating that lubrication here is effective.
My bore/ring wear (top ring gap is 0.7mm from what was 0.3 when first installed) I believe originates from running the motor hard with the knackered crank. Large bigend/main bearing clearances, low pressure and subsequent inadequate oil spray under the pistons from the jet in the top (rear side) of the rods has led to high wear here. The small end of the rod I believe is lubricated (through the two holes in the small end) from this same oil jet rather than simpy relying on oil splashed from the crank/rods. Splashed oil would be minimal I think in a dry sump motor. I also question whether the small end would be lubricated with oil scraped from the bore by the oil rings. The piston pin ends have oil fed from the scraper rings in the JE pistons (not through the 2 wholes in the stock piston) and I suppose you could argue that some of this will end up on the conrod small end?? I think that obstructing the feed jet in the rods would be terminal.
New crank + oil pump in spec should have sorted my low oil pressure giving effective oil spray under the piston crown from the rods. This did not help my already worn bores but should have given sufficient small end lube I believe.
So, why have I got rod wear when pressure is good? This is my main concern as I rebuild the motor from this point.
At the moment I think that the (considerable) bore wear may have left the piston inadequately supported enabling it to rock laterally which has induced wear at the small end despite there being lots of oil around. The visible loss of contact between the rings and the liner would also mean that less oil would be scraped from the bore and so feed to the piston pin would be reduced (even though I still think this is primarily fed from the rod oil jet).
I will compare the level of piston movement possibe with my worn JE's against that of a stock piston in a stock bore to back up my theory.
My plan is to change the rods (luckily I have a good pair in my box of bits) which I will have shot peened this time, rebore some other barrels that I have to give 0.08mm clearance with my worn pistons + new rings (correctly gapped) and pins to effectively give me a new (ish) motor from the barrels upwards.
I will fit an oil temp/pressure gauge if possible so that I can monitor what's going on in the world of lubrication.
The motor's out already and I am hopeful that I can get both rods off the crank without splitting the cases again. Much easier sorting this lot without being on my hands and knees out in the cold (especially cam timing).
Thanks for your collective thoughts; it will keep me awake at night until I have got it sorted.


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