Latest and Greatest Proper Engine Break in Procedure
The Top End engine is placed onto an electric machine that spins the crankshaft, no sparkplugs, no oil pan fitted, thus no fire.
The motor current is measured AND drops with time, after an hour of operation we find it stable.
THUS ANY DEBRIS will find the bottom tray, NOT the Oil Pan bottom.
Oil Pressure is also known.
Lance
The Top End engine is placed onto an electric machine that spins the crankshaft, no sparkplugs, no oil pan fitted, thus no fire.
The motor current is measured AND drops with time, after an hour of operation we find it stable.
THUS ANY DEBRIS will find the bottom tray, NOT the Oil Pan bottom.
Oil Pressure is also known.
Lance
The Top End engine is placed onto an electric machine that spins the crankshaft, no sparkplugs, no oil pan fitted, thus no fire.
The motor current is measured AND drops with time, after an hour of operation we find it stable.
THUS ANY DEBRIS will find the bottom tray, NOT the Oil Pan bottom.
Oil Pressure is also known.
Lance
My bench dyno IS EQUIPPED with a Filter Adapter, -12 lines, going into an O-Berg, going to a TWO quart canister filter with a 8 micron cartridge paper filter with visible pleats. I learned NOT TO USE RAGS to wipe parts when the engine is assembled as it caused the O-Berg to go into bypass within the first minutes of engine operation, I use a Special type of Paper Cloth made for engine assemble. (no lint)
The electric run in machine does have a tank/scavenge pump/filtration system to reclaim the spent oil.
I also install the Spark plugs after one hour of operation with additional run in time.
I also measure cylinder pressure when in operation.
Thus view this machine as a Shop Air Compressor.
Lance
I agree at minimum filling up the oil pump through that port is too easy to pass up for quicker oil flow at first start. Hearing that some do the crank and pray, and having 10-15 seconds of running before seeing pressure would give me a heart attack knowing what I spent on my longblock.
The Best V8 Stories One Small Block at Time
Who ever you trust to build your engine, I would ask them how they want it broke it.
Who ever you trust to build your engine, I would ask them how they want it broke it.
this podcast addresses this entire thread perfectly.
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/...=1000415364787
I cant say if those engines were ever run prior to the install in the car but thats what how it was done.
I do kind of like the idea of the slow heat transfer ring start up method. I cant see in anyway how this will hurt anything and we all know how fast steel work hardens if your drilling with too much speed or not enough feed the steel hardens up super fast and becomes a bear to drill through. Same thing could easily happen with rings galling up a bit. Local machine shop I work with follows the rule of break it in fast and it will be fast, break in slow and it will be slow. I start mine up, idle up to temp. Shut down, cool, drain oil change filter and take it out for some quick blasts in one gear WOT and engine brake down x3 park it, cool, change oil again, 500ish miles change oil again and good to go. Thats what I have done, no issues so far
edit, come to think about it that might have been 02 or 03. I dunno those years were a blur of activity
Last edited by cam; Aug 8, 2018 at 09:26 AM.












