Using a Flex Hone - Tips & Results!

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2024
  • In this video, I'll be testing out the Flex Hone by Brush Research Manufacturing, as well as sharing some tips that I've come across during my research.
    This is the Flex Hone I used in this video. The GBD series is the "heavy duty" series, and provides more abrasive per hone and typically lasts longer:
    I HIGHLY RECOMMEND this book below. It has detailed instructions, tips, and full color images detailing every step:
    Small Block Chevrolet Stock and High Performance Rebuild Book (Physical or digital):
    amzn.to/3Fd2WUG
    Brush Research Flex Hone I Used (GBD 4" 240 Grit):
    amzn.to/3UZ2FKn
    Brush Research Flex Hone, GB Series:
    amzn.to/3E8DxtH
    BRM's Flex Hone:
    www.brushresear...
    Technical Information On Using Engine Hones:
    www.enginehone...
    **The above links to tools, items, and parts used in this video may earn me a small commission through Amazon. This helps me tremendously to invest back into the channel and provide the best content possible. If you are considering purchasing any of these items, I would greatly appreciate you using my links. I will ALWAYS give you guys the same tools, products, and items that I use, or of equal or better value. Thank you!

Комментарии • 63

  • @BriGuyGarage
    @BriGuyGarage  2 года назад +11

    TWO NOTES:
    I’ve gotten a few comments about the amount of strokes I used in this video. These are the instructions directly from the manufacturer: “Honing time of 10-45 seconds. 5-60 strokes. Hone until desired finish is achieved.”
    I went with the higher end of the scale, as my cylinders were a little beat up. I tested this out on other cylinders prior. I performed 5 strokes at a time until I had the desired finish. I recommend you do the same. Your honing time will vary based on your cylinder condition.
    Additionally, I’ve used this hone again since making this video. I had even better results increasing my speed on the last handful of strokes. Seriously - move it in and out of the cylinder as fast as you can, then check your cross hatch. It came out even better than the results seen here.

  • @milomanx6531
    @milomanx6531 Год назад +4

    I shoot for a 40 degree crosshatch. It's a delicate balance of RPM and speed of the strokes. I use cast rings in my BBC builds, with a 400 grit flex hone. I ran the engine over a 1000 miles and the cylinder still had the cross hatch and the rings did break in. Where did you read 280 grit for cast rings? I read 400 grit on all rings except chrome rings. A commenter posted that too much ball honing takes too much metal out. That's incorrect. I honed a cylinder in the past 20-25 strokes and it barley took out over .0001" , one ten thousandth's. I have a good dial bore gauge, Mitutoyo. Checked it before and during.

    • @dins.garage
      @dins.garage 11 месяцев назад

      what 400 grit hone did you use? The one I used did not provide even finishing so I was thinking of redoing it with 240g and just rebuilding with that.

  • @sunswimgitman
    @sunswimgitman 3 года назад +5

    Really well done, thoughtful, clear explanation and demonstration! Thank you!

    • @BriGuyGarage
      @BriGuyGarage  3 года назад +1

      Thank you for the kind words, glad it helped!

  • @OFFICIAL_MODBOSS
    @OFFICIAL_MODBOSS 8 месяцев назад

    Good to see other NY people on RUclips. This video was so helpful with my first engine rebuild thank you for posting

  • @ct1762
    @ct1762 2 года назад +1

    crosshatch really looks about 20 degrees to me. i was taught to go really really slow with the rotation speed, but quickly with the in/out. that always assures a 35-45 degree hatch. those crosshatch gauges are nice to use to see exactly were you are. then knock down the high spots with a stiff nylon brush.

  • @Seeeeyaaaa
    @Seeeeyaaaa 2 года назад +1

    Hi dude, one thing you might mention is to be careful bottoming out the hone in the cylinder, you can hear it bouncing off the casting on the bottom of the sleeve. This is what can cause scratching in the cylinder if you damage one of more of the hone stones and then continue to hone with it. Also! ATF is a great cleaner, you could simply spray the cylinder down with brake clean and then wipe the cylinder with clean ATF until your shop towels come out clean. No need to add water this way, in fact this is the way motortrend does it and it doesnt promote rusting of your fresh surfaces. Looks like it all went well for you bar 1 cylinder, but to be fair your cylinders looked fairly rough to begin with, i probably would have used a 150-180 and then finished with a higher grit, but that means buying 2 flex hones.

    • @SOLDOZER
      @SOLDOZER Год назад +2

      Its bouncing off the wood table you moran.

  • @YogisGarage
    @YogisGarage 3 года назад +1

    Good video! I've seen/read that some folks are reversing the motor on the drill to get the same cross-hatch. I own the 3" version and will be doing it on my 2.0 FSI Audi block. Afterwards I 'll be hot-tanking it to get all the crud off of it. Nice work!

    • @BriGuyGarage
      @BriGuyGarage  3 года назад

      Interesting, I'll have to look up the theory behind using it in reverse. Thanks for sharing!

    • @jdm68
      @jdm68 Год назад +1

      I know this was 2 years ago but how did it work out? I’ll be doing it to the same block soon enough.

    • @YogisGarage
      @YogisGarage Год назад +1

      @@jdm68 it’s worked out great. The car is running great and my son uses it every day.

  • @gwolfe1231
    @gwolfe1231 3 года назад

    I recognize that flashlight ! Just bought a Flex-Hone for my 1965 Ford 200 ci.

  • @allneedsmobiledustlessblas2859
    @allneedsmobiledustlessblas2859 3 года назад +1

    Good job on the video! I haven’t decided if I’m going to do a budget build or if I’m going with a full machined rebuild.

    • @BriGuyGarage
      @BriGuyGarage  3 года назад

      I’ll tell you this.. whatever you think you’re going to spend, multiply it by 3!

  • @tristynleetl
    @tristynleetl 3 года назад +2

    Thanks for uploading!

  • @raymondpinder3692
    @raymondpinder3692 2 года назад

    Thanks for an excellent video.

  • @laiky71
    @laiky71 Год назад

    any idea how much material you removed?

  • @carlosserrano3920
    @carlosserrano3920 3 года назад +1

    This video is far under liked. Thank you for your video and your extensive how to.

    • @BriGuyGarage
      @BriGuyGarage  3 года назад

      You’re very welcome, I’m glad it was helpful!

  • @fazzeg3
    @fazzeg3 3 года назад +1

    Hey briguygarage, great work, very nice end finish, just a quick query, on the drill settings is the cross hatch achieved on clockwise or counter clockwise settings? and would you say it’s critical if not done in one direction? cheers fazzeg3

    • @BriGuyGarage
      @BriGuyGarage  3 года назад +1

      Seeing as a brand new flex hone as near perfectly circular “balls” on it, it doesn’t appear that it’s intended to be rotated in only one direction. The manufacturer recommends running it in a clockwise direction, removing the tool, switching it to counter clockwise, and to perform a few more strokes. So it doesn’t appear that rotation is limited to one direction.

  • @ronaldpotter3962
    @ronaldpotter3962 Год назад

    their miracle balls !

  • @rhythmrockets3583
    @rhythmrockets3583 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for that...very informative

  • @wesleywilliams8129
    @wesleywilliams8129 3 года назад

    Has that block been sleeved?

  • @mathieuperrin8781
    @mathieuperrin8781 Год назад

    hi, I'm a community manager from France and a work for Sedimat (this is the business who had the exclusivity for selling flexhone in France) I just want to knew if I can use your videos for marketing strategy. thanks for reading.

    • @BriGuyGarage
      @BriGuyGarage  Год назад

      Hello. Do you want to use this RUclips video link, or do you want the actual video file?

  • @riisa69mh
    @riisa69mh 3 года назад +1

    If I do this with a 320 grit flex hone on std cylinder bore that’s still good (since I’m replacing my main bearings ) can it affect or change my bore size or piston ring size ?

    • @brandonbell8159
      @brandonbell8159 3 года назад +1

      I’m not the guy doing this but no it’s not gonna change the bore size or mess with the rings. But that in mind you also don’t usually want keep honing it as long as he did either lol.

    • @laurentiuvlog6112
      @laurentiuvlog6112 3 года назад

      I order the 120 Grit . What YOU use for honing ?

    • @laurentiuvlog6112
      @laurentiuvlog6112 3 года назад

      Greg Hunder thank YOU for the answer bro !

    • @BustedClassicGarage
      @BustedClassicGarage 2 года назад +1

      Thanks for the very informative video! About to start building a 400 sbc for my 79 Z-28.

  • @Nelval573
    @Nelval573 3 года назад

    Is the the 4 1/8 size hone

    • @BriGuyGarage
      @BriGuyGarage  3 года назад

      The one used in the video is a 4" flex hone. You can see the part number at 1:43

  • @user-pw7wl3nu1l
    @user-pw7wl3nu1l Год назад

    What grade are you using?

    • @BriGuyGarage
      @BriGuyGarage  Год назад

      I finished with 240 grit. That is the correct finish for my application. It will depend on what material your piston rings are. You can Google it or ask your manufacturer.

    • @user-pw7wl3nu1l
      @user-pw7wl3nu1l Год назад

      @@BriGuyGarage 👍thanks

    • @user-pw7wl3nu1l
      @user-pw7wl3nu1l Год назад

      @BriGuyGarage What grid did you start with? Let me refresh that. How many grids did you use?

    • @BriGuyGarage
      @BriGuyGarage  Год назад

      It will depend on the condition of your cylinders. If they are in good shape, and all you need to do is prep the surface for new rings, then simply starting with your finishing grit is fine. However, for example, in another engine I just did, there were some light scratches - so I started with 180 grit, then finished with 240. Any significant scratches or cylinder damage will require a machine shop to properly hone the cylinders.

    • @user-pw7wl3nu1l
      @user-pw7wl3nu1l Год назад

      @@BriGuyGarage Thank you very much.

  • @shootermcgavin2819
    @shootermcgavin2819 2 года назад +2

    flex hones conform to all warpages. use a stone style hone

  • @TheDracfink
    @TheDracfink 3 года назад

    so is there a difference of this ball type versus the one with rectangle stones?

    • @carlosserrano3920
      @carlosserrano3920 3 года назад +1

      I'm wondering the same thing sorry you haven't got an answer yet for us both.

    • @BriGuyGarage
      @BriGuyGarage  3 года назад +1

      Sorry for taking so long, been building this car non stop. It’s my understanding that both can be used, but the flex hone / ball hone is the better choice.

    • @catsandcarsringtailgang6188
      @catsandcarsringtailgang6188 2 года назад +2

      @@BriGuyGarage NOPE! Ball hone WON'T true up cylinders! Fact. You choose poorly.

    • @SOLDOZER
      @SOLDOZER Год назад +1

      @@catsandcarsringtailgang6188 Honing done not true up cylinders. That would require an overbore.

    • @catsandcarsringtailgang6188
      @catsandcarsringtailgang6188 Год назад

      @@SOLDOZER incorrect ! @ 2:06 but worth seeing from start. ruclips.net/video/X3Crh_URvrk/видео.html This backs this up.

  • @frankc1430
    @frankc1430 2 года назад +1

    You never use a dingleberry hone unless you know that the cylinders are true!

    • @SOLDOZER
      @SOLDOZER Год назад

      If you're using a dingleberry hone you dont care if your cylinders are true.

    • @frankc1430
      @frankc1430 Год назад +1

      @@SOLDOZER Personally if I'm going to pull an engine out and do some kind of rebuild to it and put it back in a car, I'm going to spend the money and make sure it's straight. But I'm the kind of person who likes to do the job right the first time.

  • @ihatecrackhead
    @ihatecrackhead Год назад +1

    damn my engine has 500k miles and bores don't look that bad

    • @SOLDOZER
      @SOLDOZER Год назад

      Thats BS.

    • @ihatecrackhead
      @ihatecrackhead Год назад

      @@SOLDOZER I am rebuilding my dodge dakota engine starting tomorrow
      I'll take a picture of you want, it has 485,000 miles, i just rebuild the transmission last month, I had no friction material left on overdrive but forward and rear clutch packs were still good
      I have oil squirters, moly rings and it doesn't make a lot of horsepower with a big bore for a small rod to stroke ratio. i have only had to knock the glaze off the bore last time i changed the rings and replaced the bearings
      all this means low wear on the bores

    • @96cr
      @96cr Год назад

      ​@@ihatecrackheadfuel injection and low tension rings help the late model stuff last alot longer

  • @jjmccloud
    @jjmccloud 2 года назад

    Did he say 60 strokes 😳 i thought 20 was wat to many 🤣🤣

    • @BriGuyGarage
      @BriGuyGarage  2 года назад +2

      That is the recommendation directly from the manufacturer. Honing time of 10-45 seconds, 5-60 strokes until desired finish is achieved. This engine has been running now with no issues and the rings appear to have seated and sealed just fine.

  • @DM-ir6pc
    @DM-ir6pc 2 года назад

    Ur doin it too much, ur taking alot more material off than u think.. u only need to go in & out no more than 7-8 times

    • @BriGuyGarage
      @BriGuyGarage  2 года назад +2

      That is the recommendation directly from the manufacturer. Honing time of 10-45 seconds, 5-60 strokes until desired finish is achieved. My cylinders were a little beat up, so I went with the higher end of the scale.

    • @SOLDOZER
      @SOLDOZER Год назад

      Honing does not remove material.

    • @paleaura8126
      @paleaura8126 Год назад

      @@SOLDOZER Totally wrong
      Does honing a cylinder remove material
      Copy
      Searching for: Does honing a cylinder remove material
      Searching for: Does honing a cylinder remove material
      Generating answers for you…
      Generating answers for you…
      Yes, honing a cylinder does remove material. Honing is a stock removal process intended to perfect bore geometry and size by removing a minimal metal layer while generating a finish pattern to provide optimum lubricant retention1. The amount of material removed during honing depends on various factors such as the type of hone, the grit of the stones used, the condition of the cylinder, and the specific honing tool that is used23. Is there anything else you would like to know? 😊