Quote:
Originally Posted by Stan Weiss
A wrist pin offset normally is 0.060" to 0.080". When people reverse the wrist pin offset (do people still do this in stock?) this moves the pin center line 0.120" to 0.160" they may see a very small difference. Lets look at a 0.060" reverse and we a talking a little under 1 degree change in Piston TDC to crank journal TDC
Bore = 4.0 Stroke = 3.25 Rod Length = 5.7
Actual Piston Stroke 3.25019600382
Cylinder Volume 40.843168 CI 669.299602 cc
Engine Size 326.745340 CI 5354.396814 cc
Wrist Pin Offset = 0.06
Crank Angle Piston TDC -0.46932221356 Piston BDC 179.15635067565
Wrist Pin Offset = -0.06
Crank Angle Piston TDC 0.46932221356 Piston BDC 180.84364932435
Where you can really see a difference is with an inline motorcycle engine where the crank line has been moved 10 mm.
Stan
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I honestly don't think NHRA ever checks wrist pin offset in Stock or any other class. It's a gray area. Maybe that's why nobody has ever been bounced for it.
Thank you for your math on the v8 engine offset.
The initial wrist pin offset was to make engines quieter in early days, that particilar offset was the opposite of centerline direction that the offset used to gain leverage and ultimately Horsepower.
It's always been a gray area and until someone comes forward with "they've been bounced for this, then anything goes in my opinion.