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- May 14, 2011
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- Location
- On the Ridge, TN
Good one!Well let's be careful when discussing a guys "short rod"...
I corrected , its 5000 not 500. I missed a zeroI thought the same thing, but he said he reused the rod that was in there before the rebuild. I agree, that's a lot of metal to lose from that rod in 500 miles. My guess is it may have already been short.
After 178,283 miles on my 383 I had it rebuilt last year. The rebuilder reported that the (original) fuel pump push rod was BENT! How that could happen mystifies me. I can see that it is bent slightly on one end when I roll it on a granite countertop. The engine was running fine, but the body was into a two-year restoration and I figured it was time to rebuild the engine anyway. A new pushrod was installed. Now I wonder whether it is up to par or not.Well, over the weekend my 1969 383 fuel pump quit pumping fuel. I removed the pump and rod today to find that the fuel pump pushrod is 1/4" shorter than it was 5000 miles ago. the motor was completely rebuilt with a mild to comp cam. I am running a factory style pump. So my question is... What is the correction for this? I don't want to be here next year with the same problem. I DO want to continue to run a mech, style pump. I wonder about fuel pump spring pressure and what it is supposed to be and if the replacement ones we are buying have a heavier spring pressure than the original spring pressure? I used the pushrod that was in the original engine when I rebuilt it. I am assuming this was a OEM pushrod. If I do run a hardened pushrod, do I run the risk of wearing the cam instead of the pushrod.
I replaced 2 pushrods in the same 440 in a little under a year. Not sure what brand he bought but butter was harder than the pushrod. 2 Pushrods weird thing is the cam lobe was fine.
It was late last year on the second one.Wow, that sux! Was this recently?? Just a day or so ago I ranted about today's inferior grade metal on another site. There seems to be the new standard these days. I am glad I am old, lol!