mannye said:If you were buying an engine, who would you buy it from? I've heard about Barton's problems and the refusal to recognize when something's gone wrong on one of his products on here, and I've also heard that others have had terrible experiences with the Mopar crate motors.
Is there anyone that stands behind the product?
mannye said:If you were buying an engine, who would you buy it from? I've heard about Barton's problems and the refusal to recognize when something's gone wrong on one of his products on here, and I've also heard that others have had terrible experiences with the Mopar crate motors.
Is there anyone that stands behind the product?
I'm with you Ray. If I were to buy a crate motor I'd pull it apart anyway, its my favorite part of a car and I wish I had the equipment and skills to do the machine work also. I have done a valve job in the past but my tools moved awayACME A12 said:mannye said:If you were buying an engine, who would you buy it from? I've heard about Barton's problems and the refusal to recognize when something's gone wrong on one of his products on here, and I've also heard that others have had terrible experiences with the Mopar crate motors.
Is there anyone that stands behind the product?
Building an engine for a project is for me the absolute zenith of the entire process. Everybody is different, and everybody brings different skill sets to the table, so I'm not throwing anyone under the bus that chooses to go the crate motor route, or have someone build them an engine. In the case of George's monster Hemi it makes good sense to have the machinist that does the prep work do the final assembly as well. Too many $$$ at stake IMHO. But absent the extreme $$$ investment or the all-out race engine that's intended to only make it through a season, not building the engine (for me - again JMHO) is missing out on one of the most rewarding parts of this hobby. If a novice was contemplating this I would say go for it. There are PLENTY of good books out there to guide you if you've never done it before, and if you TAKE YOUR TIME and pay excruciating attention to detail you're virtually assured of success. There are plenty of good machine shops out there and finding the right one for you will probably be the hardest part of the process. I know I am fortunate to have a close friend that does all of my machine work and working closely with him - there probably isn't a project I wouldn't tackle myself. And yes, he does build complete engines and stands behind them if anyone is interested...![]()
Well the crate Hemi's are another story, when assembled in Mexico they were hand grenades, now Cummins is assembling them its a 50/50 thing. Do you run it and blow it or tear it down and check it out? Its only $13000. bucks you might throw away :yesnod:SomeCarGuy said:I know they won't make BIG power, but Chrysler built engines tend to never screw up. Change the chain, cam, etc and they don't let you down. I've went that route many times over the years and I never have to take stuff back or argue with some guru about things.
I have even had trouble with stuff like NEW oil pumps and bolted back on a crapped out OEM pump and it still worked just fine. Even mismatched cover and main body messes still worked but leaked.
Its my understanding they were all assembled at the marine plant and dynoed before shipping back in the day.SomeCarGuy said:Somehow people have forgotten how they built them back in the 60s-70s. Pretty bad when worn out 40 year old engines hold up better than brand new stuff.