Originally Posted by SE-Rawkus
Exactly my point. There is a video floating around the internet which shows a piston falling straight down once stresses were introduced to the block. @LANCESR20 showed me the video...I just can't find it anymore. :o
Will it work without a torque plate? Yes...but that is like half-assing it. Anything will work. The difference lies in how its done.
...but Ashton knows more than everyone.
Exactly my point. There is a video floating around the internet which shows a piston falling straight down once stresses were introduced to the block. @LANCESR20 showed me the video...I just can't find it anymore. :o
Will it work without a torque plate? Yes...but that is like half-assing it. Anything will work. The difference lies in how its done.
...but Ashton knows more than everyone.
Here's somebody that knows more, lol.
Mike Kojima wrote:
Since we are retaining the standard bore with the SR16VE pistons, we avoided the expensive task of boring the SR block oversize. The SR20 block suffers from severe bore distortion when the head and transmission are bolted in place. The bore can distort as much as 0.0015”, an amount that can really affect ring seal or even contribute to piston scuffing. Thus it is important to use a deck torque plate and to bolt a transmission bellhousing to an SR block when it is being bored and honed to keep the bores roundness accurate in as used conditions. Not too many shops in this country can do this sort of work on an SR and packing and shipping your block to places like Jim Wolf Technology in California or Mazworks in Florida can be very expensive.
Full article: Project Low Buck Nissan SR20DE Part 2 > MotoIQ