Years ago an engine builder who runs a large shop told me if engines are not going to be installed or ran for months or even years he installs ATF instead of oil. He dynoed them, tuned, and ran them for about 30 minutes on oil then drained and installled ATF. Is this common? I assume the engines would have to be drained and filled with oil again before initial startup?
When I told another builder about this he told me if the engine had sat for a number of years he would drain the ATF and fill with Marvel Mystery Oil. 'Sound logical?
When I told another builder about this he told me if the engine had sat for a number of years he would drain the ATF and fill with Marvel Mystery Oil. 'Sound logical?








ack in the days when Hoyt Grimes was a hot dragster pilot, there were no phone calls to order a blower drive or pulleys, no company-made intakes, not even a shop-built car. If you wanted to race a dragster, you had to build it yourself. This was no sweat for Hoyt Grimes, a master machinist and lay mechanical engineer since the late 1930s. Today, Grimes, 83, who lives on Lake Lanier, “in Buford (Georgia), up there close to Warren Johnson,” is still at it, machining parts for customers of his son Garry and his “Twister Engines” shop in Alpharetta. Hoyt still puts in seven to eight hours a day, still machining everything from street-stock hemis to big-inch, dual-engine power boats to small-block this-and-thats for local racers. 




LOL, LOL
I do use silica bags in the Corvettes to hold the humidity down.
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