Quote:
Originally Posted by zer099
You're presuming no search was done. Search "broken crankshaft" and you get six returns, none about breaking a crank. One from 2016 where a guy directly asks about the limits of breaking the crankshaft and the one reply he gets is more focused on HP and a slight guess at RPMs. Try "broken crank" and you get about two pages, but only one useful thread (in regards to the question), sans this thread that now shows up in that inquiry. And that one thread doesn't actually state why, how, conditions, or anything of the like; just that a when they retired an engine it typically had a broken crank, and their rev limit was 8750. Same goes for "valve float". I spent the better part of my time searching these boars and the internet before commenting in this thread. The original question in this thread was about 8000. The necro-revival of this thread was about similar, and in either cases I found it doubtful it was about season tracking the car and living its life in the 8000+ range. To enter the conversation and tell people they need to worry about there crank can seem absurd. We have no evidence you need to worry about your crank in the low 8000s with the type of use the engine is most likely going to see. Valve float, maybe. Rod bolts? According to a reputable shop it is an issue. Oil pump, for sure, we all should know that (though dry sump is not the only answer or the correct one depending on the engine's use).
The data is not always out there sometimes. Sometimes you have to wear on people's nerves to get information that they themselves might think is out there.
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Food for thought. Fund the frontier my friend. Sign up for tracks day beat the crap out of it for a season if it last, tear down the motor inspect every part, document it. Rebuild it and see what part fails again. Like others have stated mostly race teams have gone this route. Most people don’t want to fund the R&D. If you watch grid life static 370z has a 8k redline, at the end of the season ask him how his motor held up, curious if he will tear down the motor to inspect any failures starting to arise or will he just run it until it blows up or when it blows up will he take the time to inspect everything and share his experience or like most will he just junk the motor.