I am helping a friend get a new engine running properly in his 1965 Corvette. The engine is a 406 CI small block, roller hyd. cam, aluminum heads and a "380" Rochester fuel unit. This engine was assembled by a respected shop here in Albuquerque.
When we first fired the motor no problem was evident, oil pressure 60 PSI and steady. After breaking in the cam for 30-40 minutes at verious RPM we drove car on a 5 mile test run. Under slow acceleration to any RPM (up to 5000 RPM limit) oil pressure is steady at 60 PSI. If we accelerate with 2/3 throttle or more oil pressure will drop like a rock to 20 PSI at which time we back out of the gas and pressure goes back up. The problem is NOT RPM related. We can run the motor at a steady 4000 or 4500 RPM and pressure is steady as a rock. The problem is acceleration related.
Our first thought was pump pickup placement or plugged oil filter from assembly lube. We pulled the pan, bottom of pickup is 3/8" from bottom of pan. No problem there. Pulled filter and filter adapter, filter felt heavy (this is a WAG on my part) noticed that the bypass valve on the filter adapter had been removed and plugged with a hex plug. Replaced adapter with one having a working bypass, new filter installed, added six quarts fresh oil and went for test drive. Same problem. Good pressure at any steady state RPM, but under acceleration pressure will drop like a rock. Where do we look next? Thanks, Bill
When we first fired the motor no problem was evident, oil pressure 60 PSI and steady. After breaking in the cam for 30-40 minutes at verious RPM we drove car on a 5 mile test run. Under slow acceleration to any RPM (up to 5000 RPM limit) oil pressure is steady at 60 PSI. If we accelerate with 2/3 throttle or more oil pressure will drop like a rock to 20 PSI at which time we back out of the gas and pressure goes back up. The problem is NOT RPM related. We can run the motor at a steady 4000 or 4500 RPM and pressure is steady as a rock. The problem is acceleration related.
Our first thought was pump pickup placement or plugged oil filter from assembly lube. We pulled the pan, bottom of pickup is 3/8" from bottom of pan. No problem there. Pulled filter and filter adapter, filter felt heavy (this is a WAG on my part) noticed that the bypass valve on the filter adapter had been removed and plugged with a hex plug. Replaced adapter with one having a working bypass, new filter installed, added six quarts fresh oil and went for test drive. Same problem. Good pressure at any steady state RPM, but under acceleration pressure will drop like a rock. Where do we look next? Thanks, Bill
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