I think the reason I enjoy your channel and content is the fact that you are not trying to be a “personality”, you are just being an honest working man who enjoys his craft and wants to share your knowledge with those that can appreciate it. Keep it up sir!
Agreed, Daniel is the real deal. Love his no-nonsense, matter of fact presentation. When he "fired his customer" for the valve job, Daniel made a respectful video and didn't dwell on what a jerk the customer is.
i enjoy his upstate SC dialect. my former business partner was from North Carolina he had the same sayings and mannerisms. i am from the SC low country we have a british brogue dialect down here with a gulu/gechee inflection.
Am now 72 yrs old and used to work in the spare parts side of an engine reconditioning shop more than 40 years ago - but I snuck my nose into what everyone was doing and why. Am now also a qualified mechanic and machinist, amongst many other things. Whatever you are involved in I would like to see. Either confirms what I know or at least brings back what I think should be done. Your standard of work and ethics are as good as they come. Keep it up. There are too many slap dash folk and key board warriors on RUclips who "know it all" and they are leading many people astray. You are putting those who watch those "experts" back on the right track - as long as they do indeed listen. But there is a good reason why that expression exists. You can lead a horse to water ........... From Land Down Under.
Hey, hey, at 72 I'm still doing this stuff through a couple different careers, including automotive and machine work. I still remember the details of bringing home that aluminum 215 V8 from the junk yard (sorry, wrecking yard, recycle yard or whatever) and ordering the one piston I needed from Pep Boys to get it running. It sat clamped to a confiscated and modified shopping cart, in running condition, for a couple years until my Grandpa needed it for his Skylark (I think). Ran it that car for longer than I kept track. All that was somewhere in the neighborhood of 1965.
I am an 63 year old oil & gas drilling engineer. I am NOT a machinist or an engine builder. I would love to go back to the States and build just an old school pump gas street rod someday. I just happened across this channel and from everything I've seen on RUclips, this is the easiest to understand engine building channel for us 'shade tree' mechanics. The 'tips & secrets' are worth a mint. Please keep up the good work.
Last I time I checked, there was a torque sequence for mains and rods. Im curious when the memo was issued that said that was no more and you could torque those down however you wanted??
It is possible to ask a question and not be a complete toolbag about it. I was vaguely curious about this, but I know how to comport myself like a reasonable person.
Sweet tea in Birmingham AL must have been the drink of champions there too! Like getting coleslaw on my BBQ sandwich. From the Midwest, beef country, I enjoy all. It American. Like growing up knee high to a grass hopper, you had a truck & gun rack in the back window. I remember when local news was something got stolen 26 miles to the city) but 3.5 miles from town and it’s 4 blocks long. Parents spent two weeks looking for keys to lock the house. Enjoyed the assembly as a good habit is worth keeping! Thanks kindly for sharing.
I really enjoy your videos because you clearly define what your doing with all of the details. Thanks for taking the time to do these videos. High Fives
I might not trust him with my wife, but I'd want him or somebody he's trained and checked off on to machine and put my engine together. I enjoy the straightforward easy to understand wisdom he's generous enough to share. Thanks, man
Pete's Machine back in the 70s we used STP for assembly lube- the old school STP was really thick and sticky not like the new STP. Also noticed when you put the wrist pen keepers in- you called them locks- they was turned in all directions then I saw how you lined then up (hat) up like we use to. Pete would get engines in for rebuild with broken keepers and he discovered that the locks had not been installed properly. If you put them in side ways the piston movement and combustion process would cause the keeper spring to move or bounce and the keepers would break over time from that little movement. We also used blue Loctite on the rod bolts or nuts to make sure they stayed where we torqued them. Good job, machine work is looking good. Peace.
I’m so glad I ran across this RUclips channel and from the state that I live in South Carolina. I like what y’all do and I would like to see the fabrication videos as well. I’m so glad your channel is growing and may it continue to grow. I’ve been a performance car guy since I was old enough to remember. Greetings from Silverstreet South Carolina. Eddie Patterson.
I Love your channel. I used to help my granddaddy in his garage nearly 50 years ago. He taught me to do the rings about exactly the way you do it. We used rubber hose over the rod bolts to keep from scratching the rod journal. I went on to be a machinist and worked at a NASA shop at MSFC in Huntsville. I'm like you, believe in doing things right the first time. I later went on to Engineering at UAH.
Thanks for your teaching and caring enough to share. You got me interested when you were talking about lifters and finishing. Was a "light bulb" moment for me.
My personal secret of little consequence. Lubing bores and pistons upon install, i used outboard two-stroke oil (water cooled, not air cooled). More than enough lubrication being used straight, as outboards can run 3k hours on a 50:1 mix, and burning away clean is engineered into it. The oil is being used exactly where its designed to.
this channel is my new go to when working the graveyard shift. I work in the network operations center for a large large natural gas provider here in Oklahoma. The overnight gets quiet like a ghost town. Thank god for this content. The education behind it is second to none. I appreciate ya taking your time and sharing some insight and know how with us.
its crazy you would think that motor is just a hunk of steel, what does it matter if i torque it to a certain inch pound here and there. why cant I just impact it together? lol This is an absolute beautiful science.
I really appreciate your attention to detail. Seems like you like what you do. I wish you were my machinist. I just had to take a block to Kenmonth because first shop bores it with .008” clearance on a 4032 DSS piston. I was told to set the ring gap it’ll be fine. No thanks. I caught your video about just that topic at the very same time. Skirt clearance and rings two different things. It was nice confirmation coming from a real pro like your self. Quality and honesty getting real hard to come by these days. I am enjoying the education your channel provides. Thank you
Hey Daniel, Tim here, yea, we all got our own way of loadin rings, etc, my methods have NEVER let me down, and i've built probly over 100 motors in my lifetime (so far), one thing i dug, was using TRANS FLUID for the bores/pistons, i learned that back in the 80's....ALWAYS use it, its slippery, has detergents, and yes, low carbon when burned!!.....i wanted to say YEA BROTHER!!.....cuz in my book, tranny fluid is the way to go, enjoyed the vid!!!, TY sir!!
I've tinkered with these LS engines for almost 25 years now. You done an excellent job building this 5.3. There's lots of good valuable knowledge in all these videos. I appreciate y'all taking the time to educate us, y'all will have 100k subscribers before you know it . Keep these videos coming!
I'm a GM Technician, I mostly do heavy line, like rebuilding engines and transmissions under warranty, lifter jobs, ect. GM has rod dowels like you showed, that they want us to use, to keep from damaging the crank. They are made by Kent Moore. Love the videos!
I really enjoy your content! 40 yrs ago I attended UNOH in Lima OH and went thru the Auto Diesel program. They now also have a racing curriculum, but I loved it at UNOH. I was rebuilding auto/manual transmissions & engines before I had that specific class at UNOH. I worked at a local Ford dealer after UNOH but starting at the bottom my primary role was rust proofing and oil changes. My career path soon went to industrial maintenance and stayed there. My first love has always been engines and still enjoy wrenching on them! My Father was a mechanic so I think I get the desire naturally. Most are small engines that I work on now days. Keeps my mind going I guess? I do know that if I was in the need for engine work, I would have your shop do it no matter what it took to get it there and back! Keep up the good work!
Like the Content. And the Build process on the LS, a refresher if you will. Nothing fancy just straight forward cool tech tips, like the aluminum Connecting Rod guide tip!👍 Best of luck you are certainly heading toward your Subscriber threshold. Get your Swag out there people will buy it. Waiting on the next installment for now take care
Thanx brother, I was wondering about the dimples on the Gen 4 rods. I've heard some people say put all the dimples to the back and some say mix it. Before I actually assym my engine I would find out for sure. I know there are 4 for each bank. Thank you for that. Now I know for sure they go forward. Awesome videos brother. I really enjoy the content and the machining side of things. I've been working on cars since I was 10 but of course family and life gets in the way. So after 23 years I can finally getting back into a toy. Which is the Ls3 swap I am doing.
Great video. Makes a lot more sense watching a Pro do it. Very crafty invention with piston- rod installation tool. Great way to seat the bearing on the crank. Keep the vids coming. Very informative!!
Got a 6.0 i'm gonna build ,done about every other kind of engine liked watching someone put one together that knows what their doing thanks for the video.Might see you about a cam when I get that far
Hey Powell. I’m a new subscriber from Canada. Just wanted to send you a thumbs up 👍. Videos are straight forward and very informative. Master class of machining fundamentals. Best part is you sound just like Dale teaching machine shop. #3 💪
Keep doing it. Gonna rebuild my a 4.0 inline 6 at some point. Show everything y’all do. I like hearing you give the camera guy orders. Keep it real and honest, people will watch. I just found y’all, I’ll be tuning in. I wanna see it all, good people, good stuff. Show it all and build your video numbers up, one of might hit. I enjoyed it, good luck, and glad to be along for the ride
The ls motors are so different from the 60s 70s 80s motors it's unreal just can't get used to them haven't had a motor built with the ls stuff yet I guess I'm just old school I run dirt track Street stocks now and so far we can't run the ls motors yet I guess when they start letting us I'll have to try one but keep up the videos buddy they're awesome Max Lee learning a little bit so far. But have a good one take care
I've learned so much from your videos. One thing l noticed was some names and phone numbers on the board in the shop and l thought someone could aggravate your customers. ( If someone has an issue with you or jealousy) l don't want to see you have any negative issues. I hope I'm not out of line.
I really enjoy all the videos and the different subjects. Could you do a video on Balancing,over and under balanced and what that means. Thanks. Joe Davis
ur way over 10k now bro ur gonna blow up your channel is awesome you actually show the process and how to do stuff and is very helpful. i wish i had your channel before i built my last engine but i know my next engine will be even better with your help from these vids. i got a 357 sbc turbocharged makiin a dyno proven 637hp crankshaft output on 8lbs boost in my 70 c30 pickup blow thru carb and intercooled on 93pump
I appreciate all the tips ya offer. You’re right on target with all your tolerances. Great assembly lubes. I’d be a little Leary till I got quite a few done before I try the tranny fluid tip. Great job on the rebuild.
I found your channel because of the flat tappet videos, and it is easy to see that you have a wealth of automotive knowledge! I realize this series is about a street engine, I would be very interested to watch you assemble a serious race engine, it could be an NA or some sort of power adder, but something making at least two HP per cubic inch.
Question? At 16:20 do you put the open part of the lock clip at the 6 and or at the 12 O'clock position in reference to the length of the piston and connecting rod?
The reason I ask and only to exchange information(not critiquing at all) here is that I had read out of a Popular Mechanics article years ago to place the openings at 6 and 12 O'clock when free floating pins are used. Why? This is due to the up and down forces on the connecting rod that believe it or not would cause a stress point if the C/retaining clips when installed at either the 9 or at the 3 O'clock position the open portion/window. To clarify further if the opening is placed at the 9 O'clock position the stress would be at at the 3 O'clock position and vice e versa. Eventually over time the C-clips could possibly break due to being fatigued after all of that up and down motion. Using the 12 O'clock or 6 O'clock position is spot on. @@powellmachineinc
Really enjoying these videos - I'm glad you like doing them! I usually deal with pressed pins, so of course, the machine shop presses the pins into the rods/pistons for me. I was surprised to see you load the bearings into the rods/caps before installing the rods/pins on them. Just wondering if you had a reason for that order of operations. One thing that I'd like to see on a performance/race build up is how you set up the valvetrain, i.e., set the pushrod length. I've seen articles and videos of people getting all bent out of shape about having the rocker tip sweep evenly across the middle of the valve stem tip. Others, who I agree with, don't worry about where the tip hits as long as it's fairly centered, but go for the minimum sweep across the valve to set the correct pushrod length. I look forward to you covering details like this.
@@pete540Zholy shit is Vizard sloow, lol. If he'd speak a hair faster and a little less stories on how great he is, I'd be alot easier to listen to, lol.
Aside from the requirement of 'know-how', which is number one, the thing I never see mentioned is that it takes time to do it properly. Time to do the job and especially time to notice if something is not right.
I would love to see you reface flat tappet lifters I'm curious how to set up the radius ..dig your videos it's like watching my old machinist of 50 yrs. Since he retired I need a good machinist .keep up the great videos and I'm waiting to win the cam and lifter contest .did you ever send me a quote on refacing 16 lifters? Thanks and hope you get to 100000 soon bye for now Douglas
IMO, I'm here for the machine shop work and your quality and honesty towards it. Maaaybe a little unique fab or engine block welding in between?? But I'd personally rather your channel doesn't get diluted with 900 different things, that's not why I'm here. There's 100s of weld/fab channels. Just my input on it 👍
@@davelowets I was a Submarine Sail Inspector back in Groton CT. One of the periscopes had two 3/8" pins that secured the mast Radar Absorbent Material to the head of the periscope. The pins are held in a well with those C Clips. They rot and disappear. I check them on every inspection. One day I found one missing and recommended that the Sailor replace the Jesus Clip. He obtained a new C Clip and asked me why I called it a Jesus Clip. I stated: When it flies off that pair of C Clip Plyers and into the drink, the very first words out of your mouth is normalLy JESUS CHRIST!! HE LAUGHED FOR 10 MINUTES! I bet ya to this day him and the 5 other sailors call them Jesus Clips!
The sequence you torque the main bolts if I seen it right is front to rear rear to front I’ve never seen that before I guess I’m too old school I thought you started with the center cap and work your way out if I’m wrong please correct me thank you for your input and opinion. I appreciate it if you would thank you.
Long, long ago, I visited a machine shop that was building dirt track SBC'c. One thing that they said is that it was important while working on / assembling the engines that if they are aluminum blocks, the enginee should always be supported from both ends. They said that if its only supported by the trans mount surface, the engine can slightly droop on the non-spported end. It kind of makes sense. All machining is supported at both ends (fully supported) but whenever its on the engine stand, there is no support on the front. Please give us your thoughts on this.
I think the reason I enjoy your channel and content is the fact that you are not trying to be a “personality”, you are just being an honest working man who enjoys his craft and wants to share your knowledge with those that can appreciate it. Keep it up sir!
I appreciate that!
Agreed, Daniel is the real deal. Love his no-nonsense, matter of fact presentation. When he "fired his customer" for the valve job, Daniel made a respectful video and didn't dwell on what a jerk the customer is.
I agree 100%. Straight to the point. Good information. Legit information. No stupid-a** music or crazy cinematography nonsense. Excellent channel.
Agreed!!!
i enjoy his upstate SC dialect. my former business partner was from North Carolina he had the same sayings and mannerisms. i am from the SC low country we have a british brogue dialect down here with a gulu/gechee inflection.
Am now 72 yrs old and used to work in the spare parts side of an engine reconditioning shop more than 40 years ago - but I snuck my nose into what everyone was doing and why. Am now also a qualified mechanic and machinist, amongst many other things. Whatever you are involved in I would like to see. Either confirms what I know or at least brings back what I think should be done. Your standard of work and ethics are as good as they come. Keep it up. There are too many slap dash folk and key board warriors on RUclips who "know it all" and they are leading many people astray. You are putting those who watch those "experts" back on the right track - as long as they do indeed listen. But there is a good reason why that expression exists. You can lead a horse to water ........... From Land Down Under.
Thank you sir!! We appreciate that
@@powellmachineinc
Love your videos and the pride you take in everything you do. Keep up the great work !! 👍
Hey, hey, at 72 I'm still doing this stuff through a couple different careers, including automotive and machine work. I still remember the details of bringing home that aluminum 215 V8 from the junk yard (sorry, wrecking yard, recycle yard or whatever) and ordering the one piston I needed from Pep Boys to get it running. It sat clamped to a confiscated and modified shopping cart, in running condition, for a couple years until my Grandpa needed it for his Skylark (I think). Ran it that car for longer than I kept track. All that was somewhere in the neighborhood of 1965.
I am an 63 year old oil & gas drilling engineer. I am NOT a machinist or an engine builder. I would love to go back to the States and build just an old school pump gas street rod someday. I just happened across this channel and from everything I've seen on RUclips, this is the easiest to understand engine building channel for us 'shade tree' mechanics. The 'tips & secrets' are worth a mint. Please keep up the good work.
Thank you sir!!
Last I time I checked, there was a torque sequence for mains and rods. Im curious when the memo was issued that said that was no more and you could torque those down however you wanted??
It is possible to ask a question and not be a complete toolbag about it. I was vaguely curious about this, but I know how to comport myself like a reasonable person.
@@722racing3 Then do you what you want and kick rocks. Yack @$$.
Sweet tea in Birmingham AL must have been the drink of champions there too! Like getting coleslaw on my BBQ sandwich. From the Midwest, beef country, I enjoy all. It American. Like growing up knee high to a grass hopper, you had a truck & gun rack in the back window. I remember when local news was something got stolen 26 miles to the city) but 3.5 miles from town and it’s 4 blocks long. Parents spent two weeks looking for keys to lock the house. Enjoyed the assembly as a good habit is worth keeping! Thanks kindly for sharing.
Your welcome 🙏
Wow, you blew right past 10k subs. Congrats!
I really enjoy your videos because you clearly define what your doing with all of the details. Thanks for taking the time to do these videos. High Fives
You are very welcome
Listening to this guy talk is like therapy
Lol
love your channel the detail is very much appreciated lots of people just show pieces
I appreciate that!
I might not trust him with my wife, but I'd want him or somebody he's trained and checked off on to machine and put my engine together.
I enjoy the straightforward easy to understand wisdom he's generous enough to share.
Thanks, man
Tyvm
Pete's Machine back in the 70s we used STP for assembly lube- the old school STP was really thick and sticky not like the new STP. Also noticed when you put the wrist pen keepers in- you called them locks- they was turned in all directions then I saw how you lined then up (hat) up like we use to. Pete would get engines in for rebuild with broken keepers and he discovered that the locks had not been installed properly. If you put them in side ways the piston movement and combustion process would cause the keeper spring to move or bounce and the keepers would break over time from that little movement. We also used blue Loctite on the rod bolts or nuts to make sure they stayed where we torqued them. Good job, machine work is looking good. Peace.
Very nice work, and I appreciate all the explanation as you move through the job. It’s a real, hands on education. Thank you!
I appreciate that!
This was awesome, I really enjoyed it and learned a lot. I like how you do one piece at a time. I'm organized like that. Good Job!
You are very welcome, glad it helped!
I’m so glad I ran across this RUclips channel and from the state that I live in South Carolina. I like what y’all do and I would like to see the fabrication videos as well. I’m so glad your channel is growing and may it continue to grow. I’ve been a performance car guy since I was old enough to remember.
Greetings from Silverstreet South Carolina. Eddie Patterson.
TYVM!
There is something just so sweet when you finish torqueing the mains and give it a spin¡!!!!!!!!
Definitely
I Love your channel. I used to help my granddaddy in his garage nearly 50 years ago. He taught me to do the rings about exactly the way you do it. We used rubber hose over the rod bolts to keep from scratching the rod journal. I went on to be a machinist and worked at a NASA shop at MSFC in Huntsville. I'm like you, believe in doing things right the first time. I later went on to Engineering at UAH.
Awesome!!
Thanks for your teaching and caring enough to share. You got me interested when you were talking about lifters and finishing. Was a "light bulb" moment for me.
You're welcome!!
My personal secret of little consequence. Lubing bores and pistons upon install, i used outboard two-stroke oil (water cooled, not air cooled). More than enough lubrication being used straight, as outboards can run 3k hours on a 50:1 mix, and burning away clean is engineered into it. The oil is being used exactly where its designed to.
Always a pleasure watching a professional at work! Enjoy this channel.
Much appreciated!
I’m watching 2 months later, from 10k to 21k that’s fantastic
Absolutely
No BS dude that obviously knows his stuff! You're gonna kill it! Keep it up!
Tyvm, I really appreciate you!
Great video. I like learning. So put it up please.
Will do!
this channel is my new go to when working the graveyard shift. I work in the network operations center for a large large natural gas provider here in Oklahoma. The overnight gets quiet like a ghost town. Thank god for this content. The education behind it is second to none. I appreciate ya taking your time and sharing some insight and know how with us.
its crazy you would think that motor is just a hunk of steel, what does it matter if i torque it to a certain inch pound here and there. why cant I just impact it together? lol This is an absolute beautiful science.
Got to love digital torque wrench, must get one.
Definitely
Thanks for the video!
@@dennisholle1005 our pleasure 🙏
Make no mistake about it, You're just like S & W, when you speak 🗣️ we listen 👂. In a lot calmer voice of course 😊
😊 thank you
I really appreciate your attention to detail. Seems like you like what you do. I wish you were my machinist. I just had to take a block to Kenmonth because first shop bores it with .008” clearance on a 4032 DSS piston. I was told to set the ring gap it’ll be fine. No thanks. I caught your video about just that topic at the very same time. Skirt clearance and rings two different things. It was nice confirmation coming from a real pro like your self. Quality and honesty getting real hard to come by these days. I am enjoying the education your channel provides. Thank you
Tyvm!
Hey Daniel,
Tim here, yea, we all got our own way of loadin rings, etc, my methods have NEVER let me down, and i've built probly over 100 motors in my lifetime (so far), one thing i dug, was using TRANS FLUID for the bores/pistons, i learned that back in the 80's....ALWAYS use it, its slippery, has detergents, and yes, low carbon when burned!!.....i wanted to say YEA BROTHER!!.....cuz in my book, tranny fluid is the way to go, enjoyed the vid!!!, TY sir!!
Good deal!, thanks for watching.
That transmission fluid is great for checking to make sure there’s no swarf left in the cylinders after cleaning from honing.
Yup, that's what we clean all cylinders with
I like the piston rod installation tool awesome 👍
that rod tool is a great idea. sweet tea all day
The best!
I've tinkered with these LS engines for almost 25 years now. You done an excellent job building this 5.3. There's lots of good valuable knowledge in all these videos. I appreciate y'all taking the time to educate us, y'all will have 100k subscribers before you know it . Keep these videos coming!
Thank you very much!
Love the 5.3 for a daily driver. Watching you put that rotating assembly together was great.
This is the first episode I caught of this series. Im going to watch the rest of them. Great job!
Awesome
Great Video! Great idea using the aluminum round bar for a guide, wonder how many folks knew there were letter drill bits.
Thank you!!
I'm a GM Technician, I mostly do heavy line, like rebuilding engines and transmissions under warranty, lifter jobs, ect. GM has rod dowels like you showed, that they want us to use, to keep from damaging the crank. They are made by Kent Moore. Love the videos!
Thank you!
Always wanted to learn. I’m glad you have your channel going.
Welcome aboard!
I really enjoy your content! 40 yrs ago I attended UNOH in Lima OH and went thru the Auto Diesel program. They now also have a racing curriculum, but I loved it at UNOH. I was rebuilding auto/manual transmissions & engines before I had that specific class at UNOH. I worked at a local Ford dealer after UNOH but starting at the bottom my primary role was rust proofing and oil changes. My career path soon went to industrial maintenance and stayed there. My first love has always been engines and still enjoy wrenching on them! My Father was a mechanic so I think I get the desire naturally. Most are small engines that I work on now days. Keeps my mind going I guess? I do know that if I was in the need for engine work, I would have your shop do it no matter what it took to get it there and back! Keep up the good work!
Like the Content. And the Build process on the LS, a refresher if you will. Nothing fancy just straight forward cool tech tips, like the aluminum Connecting Rod guide tip!👍 Best of luck you are certainly heading toward your Subscriber threshold. Get your Swag out there people will buy it. Waiting on the next installment for now take care
Thank you!! We really appreciate you
You're welcome. New Fan here
Thanx brother, I was wondering about the dimples on the Gen 4 rods. I've heard some people say put all the dimples to the back and some say mix it. Before I actually assym my engine I would find out for sure. I know there are 4 for each bank. Thank you for that. Now I know for sure they go forward. Awesome videos brother. I really enjoy the content and the machining side of things. I've been working on cars since I was 10 but of course family and life gets in the way. So after 23 years I can finally getting back into a toy. Which is the Ls3 swap I am doing.
Ty very much
You are very good at what you do you make it look easy and I also enjoy sweet tea 😊
Thanks so much 😊
Thanks so much 😊
@@powellmachineinc your welcome
always great to see a professional and good practices and proper lubricants, just straight shooting!
Thank you, we appreciate you
Awesome video in an awesome series. You are a fountain of knowledge and fully appreciated. Loving your content from over here in New Zealand.
Much appreciated!
Great video. Makes a lot more sense watching a Pro do it. Very crafty invention with piston- rod installation tool. Great way to seat the bearing on the crank. Keep the vids coming. Very informative!!
Glad you enjoyed it
Keep’em comin. All videos of anything that y’all work on would be great.
Thanks! Will do!
Glad I ran across your channel.
Enjoying your videos very much.
I really enjoy watching and learning. I am willing to bet that machinists are OCD and perfectionists.
Could watch this for hours! Cant wait for the new few engines in line 😉
Coming soon!
This guy is so good that he catches his own mistakes before you can ❤
Great watch. Terry from Alberta Canada, keep on keeping on. 👍
Awesome thank you!
Glad I found this channel! Great content, plus I'm just up the road a piece in Greenville!
All your videos are very educational. Nice job
Good stuff with the assembly tricks and tips
TYVM
Great stuff mate
Glad you think so!
Haha Your already over 12k and the video has been out for just 3 days. Great content and very informative.
Great videos, thank you. I am learning a lot.
Thanks for watching!
Just another great informative video, from an honost shop, thanks for sharing ! Keep them coming .
Thanks, will do!
loved the aligning rod for fitting the pistons.i should have thought of that 60 odd years ago.
Could you explain why you torque to a value and then rotate to a different angle? What does that do for you?
All newer engines are "torque to angle " on most fasteners
Got a 6.0 i'm gonna build ,done about every other kind of engine liked watching someone put one together that knows what their doing thanks for the video.Might see you about a cam when I get that far
Hey Powell.
I’m a new subscriber from Canada. Just wanted to send you a thumbs up 👍.
Videos are straight forward and very informative. Master class of machining fundamentals.
Best part is you sound just like Dale teaching machine shop.
#3 💪
Thank you! Dale was 1 of a kind
Keep doing it. Gonna rebuild my a 4.0 inline 6 at some point. Show everything y’all do. I like hearing you give the camera guy orders. Keep it real and honest, people will watch. I just found y’all, I’ll be tuning in. I wanna see it all, good people, good stuff. Show it all and build your video numbers up, one of might hit. I enjoyed it, good luck, and glad to be along for the ride
Keep it up, I watch every minute of every video
I appreciate it!
Love watching your videos and I'm learning a lot. Chef by trade but work on my gr86 for fun. Greetings from North Carolina.
Thanks for watching! Glad it helps!
The ls motors are so different from the 60s 70s 80s motors it's unreal just can't get used to them haven't had a motor built with the ls stuff yet I guess I'm just old school I run dirt track Street stocks now and so far we can't run the ls motors yet I guess when they start letting us I'll have to try one but keep up the videos buddy they're awesome Max Lee learning a little bit so far. But have a good one take care
I've learned so much from your videos. One thing l noticed was some names and phone numbers on the board in the shop and l thought someone could aggravate your customers. ( If someone has an issue with you or jealousy) l don't want to see you have any negative issues. I hope I'm not out of line.
Yep, we make sure no #s are on the board now, it's hard to think of everything and I'm new to this yt stuff, ty!! For pointing it out
I like the tool you made/used to pull the piston into the bore. Very cool.
Glad to find your channel.
G'day from Australia, New to Your Channel and Really enjoy it, Cheers Fella .😊😊😊
Thanks and welcome
I really enjoy all the videos and the different subjects.
Could you do a video on Balancing,over and under balanced and what that means.
Thanks.
Joe Davis
We rarely do it, "over balancing " seems to help high rpm stability, but the only thing we ever use it on is vtwin harley davidson.
I have a machine shop in NC. Would like to see a tour of your shop and equipment. I noticed your hoist built on your line hone, nice job
Thanks for the idea!
ur way over 10k now bro ur gonna blow up your channel is awesome you actually show the process and how to do stuff and is very helpful. i wish i had your channel before i built my last engine but i know my next engine will be even better with your help from these vids. i got a 357 sbc turbocharged makiin a dyno proven 637hp crankshaft output on 8lbs boost in my 70 c30 pickup blow thru carb and intercooled on 93pump
I appreciate all the tips ya offer. You’re right on target with all your tolerances. Great assembly lubes. I’d be a little Leary till I got quite a few done before I try the tranny fluid tip. Great job on the rebuild.
Awesome, ty for watching, we appreciate it
Great video awesome tips. I did but some parts from you way back. Anyways shout out from your northern cousins!
Awesome! Thank you!
I found your channel because of the flat tappet videos, and it is easy to see that you have a wealth of automotive knowledge! I realize this series is about a street engine, I would be very interested to watch you assemble a serious race engine, it could be an NA or some sort of power adder, but something making at least two HP per cubic inch.
Love the channel, thanks for sharing
Awesome, glade to have you
NICE TO WATCH A PRO WITH CLEANLINESS
Tyvm!
Enjoy your videos and Yes they are educational. Keep your camera Man!
He put the clip in on the opposite side of the dot first! No wonder those clips were flying everywhere!
Great demo, thanks for the knowledge.
Thanks for watching!
I like that connecting rod tool great idea !
Your videos are amazing.
Thank you very much 😊
All very interesting. Thanks for sharing.
Question? At 16:20 do you put the open part of the lock clip at the 6 and or at the 12 O'clock position in reference to the length of the piston and connecting rod?
I put it at 6.00 only because of ocd, not because it matters
The reason I ask and only to exchange information(not critiquing at all) here is that I had read out of a Popular Mechanics article years ago to place the openings at 6 and 12 O'clock when free floating pins are used. Why? This is due to the up and down forces on the connecting rod that believe it or not would cause a stress point if the C/retaining clips when installed at either the 9 or at the 3 O'clock position the open portion/window. To clarify further if the opening is placed at the 9 O'clock position the stress would be at at the 3 O'clock position and vice e versa. Eventually over time the C-clips could possibly break due to being fatigued after all of that up and down motion. Using the 12 O'clock or 6 O'clock position is spot on. @@powellmachineinc
Really enjoying these videos - I'm glad you like doing them!
I usually deal with pressed pins, so of course, the machine shop presses the pins into the rods/pistons for me.
I was surprised to see you load the bearings into the rods/caps before installing the rods/pins on them.
Just wondering if you had a reason for that order of operations.
One thing that I'd like to see on a performance/race build up is how you set up the valvetrain, i.e., set the pushrod length.
I've seen articles and videos of people getting all bent out of shape about having the rocker tip sweep evenly across the middle of the valve stem tip. Others, who I agree with, don't worry about where the tip hits as long as it's fairly centered, but go for the minimum sweep across the valve to set the correct pushrod length. I look forward to you covering details like this.
Minimum sweep is king, but.... it can't be falling off the tip either, sometimes the rocker is the problem and you need something else to make it work
FINALLY I CRACKED THE CODE !!!
click on settings, playback speed, custom, set it to 1.2 and he sounds normal then !!!
😂
Lol
1.0 is o.k. for me and Mr. Powell. Now if I'm watching David Vizard, I HAVE to go to 1.5:1!!!
@@pete540Zholy shit is Vizard sloow, lol. If he'd speak a hair faster and a little less stories on how great he is, I'd be alot easier to listen to, lol.
Aside from the requirement of 'know-how', which is number one, the thing I never see mentioned is that it takes time to do it properly. Time to do the job and especially time to notice if something is not right.
I would love to see you reface flat tappet lifters I'm curious how to set up the radius ..dig your videos it's like watching my old machinist of 50 yrs. Since he retired I need a good machinist .keep up the great videos and I'm waiting to win the cam and lifter contest .did you ever send me a quote on refacing 16 lifters? Thanks and hope you get to 100000 soon bye for now Douglas
We have lifter videos on here
Love videos! I wish I could work there
Maybe one day!
Another great video.
Glad you enjoyed it
IMO, I'm here for the machine shop work and your quality and honesty towards it. Maaaybe a little unique fab or engine block welding in between?? But I'd personally rather your channel doesn't get diluted with 900 different things, that's not why I'm here. There's 100s of weld/fab channels. Just my input on it 👍
💯, great point
Sledge hammer the crank, top tip there.
Lol
Clip time 15:55 That my friend is why there called Jesus Clips Because when they fly across the shop, the first thing you say is JEUS CHRIST. LMAO!
Yep, I've called them Jesus clips for decades now...
I don't even remember where I heard the term, but YES, it sure fits.
@@davelowets I was a Submarine Sail Inspector back in Groton CT. One of the periscopes had two 3/8" pins that secured the mast Radar Absorbent Material to the head of the periscope. The pins are held in a well with those C Clips. They rot and disappear. I check them on every inspection. One day I found one missing and recommended that the Sailor replace the Jesus Clip. He obtained a new C Clip and asked me why I called it a Jesus Clip. I stated: When it flies off that pair of C Clip Plyers and into the drink, the very first words out of your mouth is normalLy JESUS CHRIST!! HE LAUGHED FOR 10 MINUTES! I bet ya to this day him and the 5 other sailors call them Jesus Clips!
The sequence you torque the main bolts if I seen it right is front to rear rear to front I’ve never seen that before I guess I’m too old school I thought you started with the center cap and work your way out if I’m wrong please correct me thank you for your input and opinion. I appreciate it if you would thank you.
It's irrelevant..the caps are independent, the mains aren't a cylinder head with a gasket.
@@powellmachineinc thank you
Love all the videos im a new subscriber
Ty, welcome
Long, long ago, I visited a machine shop that was building dirt track SBC'c. One thing that they said is that it was important while working on / assembling the engines that if they are aluminum blocks, the enginee should always be supported from both ends. They said that if its only supported by the trans mount surface, the engine can slightly droop on the non-spported end. It kind of makes sense. All machining is supported at both ends (fully supported) but whenever its on the engine stand, there is no support on the front. Please give us your thoughts on this.
My thoughts? Absolutely nonsense
Would love if you guys sold that rod tool that threads in and hold the bearing in place
It's definitely on the list
Good stuff as usual.
Glad you enjoyed it
Dang..you shot straight past 10k!
You ever try loading pistons with the engine on the bench flywheel side down standing up?
Yes, use to build short blocks like that often, especially 4cyl stuff
Great video thanks 👍👍
Glad you enjoyed it