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Did you use assembly oil/grease when rebuilding you engine .
I really do not see any advantage .
waste of time in my opinion .
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[quote name='flash' timestamp='1357144114' post='136940']interesting point. i always used an engine building grease when i built them. however, my current builder refuses to do that on porsche engines, due to their tighter tolerances. he says it actually can cause a starvation problem. since he built this one, i let him do it his way.[/quote]
I agree .
Some parts oil is better and some parts the assembly lube .
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An Aluminum pan and engine block will soak up the heat from the oil almost immediately. A light weight oil to me is the way to go. You will be draining it soon to check for any metal particles anyway. My father used cheese cloth to strain the new oil and I have followed suit. I have even used 10-10 turbine oil before with great results as it cleans out all oil passage ways.
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Larry
Retired USAF and Civil Service
Life is great if you live long enough to enjoy it.
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I don't really see that the science supports warming the oil unless you are using a single grade oil. If you are using a multi-viscosity oil, I don't see much of a benifit to heating the oil up first. Due to the nature of the multi-visosity, the viscosity in cenitstokes (?sp) will be close to the same no matter what temp you have the oil at as long as it isn't outside in 0F weather. If it is an attached garage where it's in the 50F range or higher, I wouldn't worry about it.
I do practice the use of assembly lube (gives you a little more protection when surfaces are new to one another especially when the assembly process may have added some microscopic nicks or brusess; adds some extra EP modifers to the mix while they burnish themselves together). Always put a bar on the crank and turn it over by hand, just to make sure it feels right. And then I crank the engine with either the fuel pump off, or the igntion not working just to make sure all the galleys are primed before starting.
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There are oil pressure systems like that made for race applications. It is basically a tank with a pressure bladder on one side, and oil on the other which is connected into the lube system of the engine. It has a gate valve in the line, so when the engine is running it will build up pressure in the tank. Once the tank shows system pressure, then the gate valve is closed so as to maintain pressurized oil in the tank (they usually also have a schrader valve on the air side of the bladder so it can be pressurized from an air pump). Before you start the engine, you open the gate valve which sends pressurized oil though the engine. I don't know enough about the systems to know how they deal with the extra volume of oil, until the tank is refilled after the engine starts.
'92 Midnight Blue 968 Coupe
'94 ProbeGT, Eaton SC@9psi, Quaife, TecGT ECU, 300+HP, body sold, parting out
'98 3000GT VR-4, 400+HP AWD beast, didn't fit w/race helmet, Sold
'93 Bone Stock MX-6 Sold (in '05) sadly to the crusher in 2010
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When I lived in Alaska we got 40 watt heating pads from NAPA for $10 and siliconed it onto the oil pan to keep the oil warm over night. This should heat your oil to about 100-140 degrees F depending on oil volume and ambient temps. They plug into standard 120V outlets. Cheap and quick.
Current: 1994 968 Coupe, 1987 944S, 2004 VW GTI 1.8T, H-D XR1200
Previous Porsches: 2000 986S, 1974 914 2.0 Blue, 1974 914 2.0 Yellow, 1970 914 1.7, 1985 928S
Previous non-Porsche favorites: 1974 Early Bronco, 1975 Cosworth Vega, 1977 Trans Am 6.6L, 1973 Karmann Ghia, 1983 Supra (turbocharged)
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Current: 1994 968 Coupe, 1987 944S, 2004 VW GTI 1.8T, H-D XR1200
Previous Porsches: 2000 986S, 1974 914 2.0 Blue, 1974 914 2.0 Yellow, 1970 914 1.7, 1985 928S
Previous non-Porsche favorites: 1974 Early Bronco, 1975 Cosworth Vega, 1977 Trans Am 6.6L, 1973 Karmann Ghia, 1983 Supra (turbocharged)