Fellow Sufferers
The newly arrived 1949 Longstroke Basket Case Motor has an undamaged cylinder barrel, the threads are all good, as is the bore. There is no wear ridge, but an obvious area of unmarked bore above where the top ring would stop. So at some stage it has been a runner. Needless to say, there are no pistons for comparison.
The first problem for me is a conundrum measuring the bore. I understand the Nominal Bore for this engine is 62mm. or 2.4405"
With a metric caliper, I get 62.3mm. An imperial internal micrometer measures 2.454" A difference of .0135" from nominal standard bore.
So it looks to be already bored plus 10, and with additional clearance or wear of almost 4 thou, yet there is no wear ridge. The bore is the same diameter at the skirt.
My understanding is that the piston manufacturer simply specifies the finished bore size, and a piston running in such a bore will have the correct running clearance.
Anyone able to shed light on this? Never seen a plus 10 piston, or a 14 thou bore clearance. Maybe I have the basics wrong?
Swarfy.