GRP Rods ?????
If your piston is normally .008" out of the hole, with a GRP rod your pistons would need to be .012" in the hole.
The Bill Miller forged rods tend to last a lot better on the street, rather then cut from a billet blank, they're forged to shape, so the grain structure goes around the small end and big end of the rod, rather than the small end and big end of the rod cutting through the straight grain structure of the billet rods.
There is no way I would run those on a street car for more than one season.
Read more here.
http://www.bmeltd.com/rods.htm
If they are new alum rods they can be run on the street but there just alot more things you need to worry about and do to make them live longer.
If there used it taking a huge shot in the dark to use them. so polish them up and use them to make a glass coffee table
Wiseco, their dish pistons specially, need to keep over the pin thickness to around .250", by default small end width will be 1.040", too wide for alot of shelf pistons, both dimensions are specified when initial ordering.
Aluminum rods breaking, happens lot less nowadays, when an aluminum rod breaks, minimal collateral damage. Steel rod breaks it gets nasty, doesn't want to let go.
Last edited by AES Racing; Nov 21, 2010 at 10:09 PM.
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Wiseco, their dish pistons specially, need to keep over the pin thickness to around .250", by default small end width will be 1.040", too wide for alot of shelf pistons, both dimensions are specified when initial ordering.
Aluminum rods breaking, happens lot less nowadays, when an aluminum rod breaks, minimal collateral damage. Steel rod breaks it gets nasty, doesn't want to let go.
. Thanks for the advise guys.
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