JoeCrozier
Well-known member
Hey everyone,
I’ve posted before about this Ford 144 I got for free—literally found it lying in the dirt. It was in rough shape, with water in the cylinders and all, but I figured since it was free, I’d just clean it up, hone it with a drill, and reuse the old pistons to keep it cheap.
Well… I got attached. Now I want to do it right.
My plan is to take it to a machine shop to have it overbored and honed, then order a set of new pistons from Egge (seems like the only place that still sells 144 pistons). My main questions are:
I’ve posted before about this Ford 144 I got for free—literally found it lying in the dirt. It was in rough shape, with water in the cylinders and all, but I figured since it was free, I’d just clean it up, hone it with a drill, and reuse the old pistons to keep it cheap.
Well… I got attached. Now I want to do it right.
My plan is to take it to a machine shop to have it overbored and honed, then order a set of new pistons from Egge (seems like the only place that still sells 144 pistons). My main questions are:
- When I get the new pistons, is installing them onto the connecting rods something I can do at home with basic tools? Or is this something I should have the machine shop handle?
- If the machine shop does it, do I typically just leave the whole engine with them from when they bore it until the install?
- Do machine shops usually order the pistons themselves, or do I bring them the ones I ordered?
- What’s the usual process for this kind of job?
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