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Hello Gents, I need some help. I am tearing down a 1992 968 to replace rod bearings and WYIT things. I have heard the 92 rods are p/poor at best and should be replaced with 951 Turbo Forged Rods. I can't remember what year has the best Forged Rarst Rods. Any help will be greatly appreciated.
Cheers,
Larry
Retired USAF and Civil Service
Life is great if you live long enough to enjoy it.
1985.2 944 NA, Metallic Graphite - A continued work in progress
1992, 968 Cab, Horizon Blue
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Well I got the help I needed real fast. I harp all the time that SEARCH is your friend. I should have remembered my own advise. Thanks anyway if you took the time out to read my post.
Cheers,
Larry
Retired USAF and Civil Service
Life is great if you live long enough to enjoy it.
1985.2 944 NA, Metallic Graphite - A continued work in progress
1992, 968 Cab, Horizon Blue
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The early 944NA rods, 944.103.101.3 RARAST are nice forged rods and supposedly got used in the late 951. The early 951 rods are supposed to be somewhat stronger, 944.103.110.0 RARAST. They weigh exactly the same as the 101.3 rods (I weighed them.)
Some have found 110.0 rods in later 951 engines and I do not know where the cutoff was. I have found the 101.3 in 1986 NA motors, I do not know where the cutoff is there either. Many said it was much earlier than 1986.
Rods to avoid are the non RARST 944 rods that replaced the 101.3, and the 968 1R rods. The cast 944 rod seems fine in 944NA motors but but not strong enough for boost.
The 1R rods have been bent in 968 and 928GTS engines but there seems to be little info on how this was accomplished. Normal street use does not seem to be a problem. They were replaced with a rod that had more meat in the transition between the beam and the big end.
There are S2 and 2.7NA rods out there too I think, I do not know anything about them.
I recall a TSB that said to replace all the 1R rods in any engine that had a rod cap taken off or something to that effect. There is supposed to be good data on the 968 engine numbers that got the 2R rods. My blue car is supposed to have the 2R rods but i have not looked.
-Joel.
Joel Frahm
1992 968 Cabrio Black/Cashmere
1994 968 Cabrio Iris Blue/Lt. Grey - Supercharged
1987 928S4 Diamondblau/Blue
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I think you misunderstand. The comma indicates a list.
Avoid:
The non-RARST 944 rods
1R Rods.
Joel Frahm
1992 968 Cabrio Black/Cashmere
1994 968 Cabrio Iris Blue/Lt. Grey - Supercharged
1987 928S4 Diamondblau/Blue
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Actually on further thought the 2R rods are pretty meh so you might as well avoid them also. I see little point when there are lots of alternatives. I think they are sintered rather than forged rods and while perhaps lighter not likely stronger than the proven 101.3 and 110.0 rods. I do not know if they are lighter, cost saving was more likely the effort. I have sets of both the 110.0 and 101.3 rods and weighed them, they weigh the same which I believe was to allow for interchangeability. I think the cast 944 rods weigh the same as well, I have a set of these but have not weighed them and they still have pistons attached.
If someone has a 1R or 2R rod please toss it on the scale.
I also think the 944S2 rods are the same as the early 968 rod and I recall there was a supercharged S2 that blew the bottom end at one point.
Joel Frahm
1992 968 Cabrio Black/Cashmere
1994 968 Cabrio Iris Blue/Lt. Grey - Supercharged
1987 928S4 Diamondblau/Blue
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"meh" is a slang term used to indicate indifference, disinterest, etc. It is not quite as contextually versatile as "dude."
I suppose if 2R rods were a different weight than 1R there might also be different balance shaft part numbers. Given that in the past Porsche made the effort to keep rod weights the same for interchangeability I would imagine the 2R weighs the same as the 1R but you can always weigh them and see. As long as they are used in sets of 4 I dunno if it matters much compared to the weight that might be removed when balancing the crank. Plus people run aftermarket rods which are significantly lighter than stockers.
-Joel.
Joel Frahm
1992 968 Cabrio Black/Cashmere
1994 968 Cabrio Iris Blue/Lt. Grey - Supercharged
1987 928S4 Diamondblau/Blue
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Hello Gents, I wish to thank all of you for the great amount of insight on all the connecting rods available for use in the 968 engine. A chip might be the only thing I will be adding. I do not worry how the harmonic balance might be affected by using the 86 951 rods. I will be replacing all four rods so that may help on the balance. Being that I am retired kind of limits what money I have to play with every month, so brand new rods are out of the question for me. I have no plans for using the car for track. It's normal driving for fun, but I did learn how to drive on the Autobahn. <img src="/forum/images/smilies/968/EmoticonCar.gif" class="smilie" alt="" />
Cheers,
Larry <img src="/forum/images/smilies/968/smile.png" class="smilie" alt="" />
Retired USAF and Civil Service
Life is great if you live long enough to enjoy it.
1985.2 944 NA, Metallic Graphite - A continued work in progress
1992, 968 Cab, Horizon Blue
Posts: 341
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Hi Larry,
I would not worry about the 1R rods in your case. I would be more worried about disturbing the ring package. Re-ringing and re-bedding new rings without the pixie dust on the old pistons might do more harm than good. Some say you should scuff the bores, some say don't... I dunno.
Neither of us have bent a 1R rod so maybe it's better to just keep the revs in check, buy quality gas and not worry about it.
In general I feel if you are at the point of swapping rods and re-ringing you are should be doing a serious build. Otherwise you are much better served with a good used running long block. No one puts them together like the factory and trying to get close to that process costs a ton of money and time.
Rod bearings, rod nuts, Reinforce the oil pickup tube, do the usual top-end stuff, cambelt stuff and go drive.
Cheers,
-Joel.
Joel Frahm
1992 968 Cabrio Black/Cashmere
1994 968 Cabrio Iris Blue/Lt. Grey - Supercharged
1987 928S4 Diamondblau/Blue