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I'm you have answered this before but why valve reliefs? Are you making a cam that will need them?
Just curious are the machining marks being smoothed out or is the coating supposed to take care of that?
IfI were not such a chiggin, I`d pull the engine from My truck, drop the bottom end for a rebuild and a set of Your coated pistons, just too much risk of the block being cracked in the mains area.
if I would ever do a different engine, it would be from Teds trucks, then, have them install the gapless rings and Your coated 18:1 pistons.
You might be surprised @MrMarty51. Yours is a 2000 like mine if it’s the original engine. Mine has 298,000 miles on it and when I pulled my engine last year to check it out after it ran real hot and she wasn’t cracked. If I was a betting man I’d bet yours is probably not cracked.
Thinking back my low comp engine was fairly quite even with the timing way advanced. The marks were a solid 1/8th inch apart. It was a very cold hearted though, had to sit and build some decent heat before driving.
You might be surprised @MrMarty51. Yours is a 2000 like mine if it’s the original engine. Mine has 298,000 miles on it and when I pulled my engine last year to check it out after it ran real hot and she wasn’t cracked. If I was a betting man I’d bet yours is probably not cracked.
I too am hoping so. I did not know that about the blocks. I`m not a throw away sort of a person, I enjoy rebuilding, but, with only 255,000 on this engine, and a new timing chain set, I`m hoping to get it to over 300,000 before opening it up, then We shall see.My new (to me) block is a 2000 GM 506 block so I'm hoping you're right.
GM continued to improve the block up till the last of the production run so it's looking like the later GM 506 blocks are mostly crack free.
But then, I destroyed an Optimizer, so who knows?