Precisely. I posed a direct question twice (or more times) and I received a direct answer.
Well, I think the answer lies in the first post of last Tuesday's "metal in filter thread" when I said:
This thread isn't about whether or not I need to OH my engine like Larry wants to make it.
It's not about whether or not the expectation that AvLab could do what they said was reasonable like Larry wants to make it.
It's not about how I went "looking for a fight" like Larry wants to make it...I didn't, I simply went looking for information.
What this thread is about is that I was blatantly lied to by AvLab and I simply wanted to warn others about this.
This thread is a fine example of why people are hesitant to share information on this site. The pompous blowhards, working with incomplete third hand info, twist things around and go into full insult and attack mode. I guess they think it makes them look big in the eyes of others. Seems to me to be the Internet version of small man's syndrome. We all learn a lot less and this place is far less useful because of those blowhards.
Hopefully my commentary that you were going to end up pulling jugs wasn't considered "blowhard". (Honestly I haven't kept up well with the ten threads that have resulted from the same engine problem, I think, nor what others have said.)
My personal experience has been that yanking the jugs is going to happen from watching ten or a few less people go through this.
They always want "more info before cracking it open" and an awful lot of the modern Mike Busch wishful thinking creeps in, and a week or a month later, the jugs are off and they're looking inside anyway.
They're pretty simple mechanically compared to more modern stuff. When they start shedding metal chunks, it's pretty rare that they stop.
Just my personal observations. No blowhard-ness intended.
Good natured ribbing, absolutely.
Ever seen the Clint Smith video about ten "Rhodes Scholars" standing around the guy with a firearm that malfunctioned at the range pontificating about why, instead of the guy just immediately doing the tap, rack, bang drill and getting the machine functioning again?
Out of all of the O-470 metal stories I've heard (and mechanics may have heard better), only ONE didn't make any more metal for hundreds of hours after a single flake.
With those odds, I'll patiently wait while my co-owners work their way through the thought process and even pay some snake oil place $100 if they want to do that, but it's mostly to make them feel better.
9/10 times its getting at least partially disassembled and looked at.
Mostly stated again so the assembled masses know what I'm thinking when I say, "just pull a jug and get it over with". I know you're headed down that path here shortly.
Metal coming from a big sloppy engine like an O-470 means something probably needs dealt with. It's just how the numbers usually work out. That's all I'm insinuating.
A complete overhaul? Not always necessary. Best to find the actual problem or know it's not something common in the top end, before making that decision.