Re: Continental metallurgy specs?
I was wondering the same thing.
If it's a 4 ring it's the old p/n 4544 piston. This can be verified with the pin diameter, should be .895. But it doesn't end there, there's an AD that put in a heavy wall pin, each pin has slip fit plugs but each are different part numbers and different I/D's.
If it has a .912 pin it shouldn't be a 4 ring piston. The later pistons had the .912 pins, but 3 rings for the 65, 5 rings for the 75 but ALL 75 pistons have a.895 pin.
The latest and greatest pin is the .912 diameter with the pressed in plugs, due to the fact that the other pin plugs would wear and put metal in the oil and wear the cylinder walls.
EO
I was wondering the same thing.
If it's a 4 ring it's the old p/n 4544 piston. This can be verified with the pin diameter, should be .895. But it doesn't end there, there's an AD that put in a heavy wall pin, each pin has slip fit plugs but each are different part numbers and different I/D's.
If it has a .912 pin it shouldn't be a 4 ring piston. The later pistons had the .912 pins, but 3 rings for the 65, 5 rings for the 75 but ALL 75 pistons have a.895 pin.
The latest and greatest pin is the .912 diameter with the pressed in plugs, due to the fact that the other pin plugs would wear and put metal in the oil and wear the cylinder walls.
EO
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