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[quote name='earossi' date='Mar 8 2006, 07:47 PM']RS Barn has worked out a sprocket repair. I believe that Pete charges about $650 to rework both cams. I also recall that he will do it on an exhange basis; so, he can send you out reworked cams immediately and you return your damaged cams. Suggest you contact him personally.
[right][post="17112"]<{POST_SNAPBACK}>[/post][/right][/quote]
I'm curious....how do you replace worn teeth on a cam and have them be strong enough? That is, when metal is welded, the tensile strength between the new metal and the old varies. Am I wrong? Or are the teeth and lobes renewed some other way?
Harvey
I like cars whose eyes pop up...
'94 968 Double-Black, 72K Miles (Weekend Queen, Heavenly Handling)
'88S4 928, Polar Silver, 41K miles (Daily Driver)
'85S 928, 32V, 5 spd (SOLD to an enthusiast. I miss this great car)
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Metals can be re-tempered through a specific heating and cooling process.
92 968 cab (cobalt blue/black top/grey int)
87 944S
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Just my $0.02, but I bit the bullet and bought new cams at $700 each. Just couldn't sleep as well knowing I had 'rebuilt' cams. Real or imagined, I had visions of the sprocket shattering around the shaft. Yes, expensive insurance. Not intending to spark a debate about my knowledge of metallurgy - it's lousy, and minimizing worry was the objective.
In the future, I am preventing cam teeth issues by inspecting the variocam pads for wear. Why? Wear of the pads causes the chain to stretch, which wears down and weakens the teeth, which cause the chain to wear, which causes further...etc. The solution is preventative maintenance - change the pads and the chain, both cheap by comparison. BTDT, and spent a small fortune in the process.
Buzz
1992 968 coupe, 6-spd., midnight blue metallic on cashmere beige leather, bone stock daily driver
1980 911SC, short shift 5-spd., cashmere beige on brown leather, Factory Recaro sport seats, time capsule preserved beyond belief
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[quote name='S_Cal968' date='Mar 10 2006, 02:59 PM']..... The problem with welding is the grain alignment is not the same as the original cast cam. It would be interesting to see how a repaired cam holds up over time.
[right][post="17180"]<{POST_SNAPBACK}>[/post][/right][/quote]
I'm with you S_Cal968. I'm skeptical about the long term...grain lining up, etc. I've seen too many metals break along the weld line. I'd like to know who's used these repaired cams and for how long.
Harvey
I like cars whose eyes pop up...
'94 968 Double-Black, 72K Miles (Weekend Queen, Heavenly Handling)
'88S4 928, Polar Silver, 41K miles (Daily Driver)
'85S 928, 32V, 5 spd (SOLD to an enthusiast. I miss this great car)
'02 Audi TT, Turbo, 6 spd (SOLD. Porsche is better in about every way)