simtech
En-Route
So...tappets are nothing more than a lifter? Why am I just learning about this...Is there a physical difference in them from a typical lifter?
Is there a physical difference in them from a typical lifter?
What do you consider a typical lifter?
roller on the bottom and concaved on top to accommodate pushrod.
You must only work on late model car stuff if that's what you first think of.
That's the problem right there. The word "typical" is highly loaded because it is application and period specific.What do you consider a typical lifter?
How do you split the case of a small block Chevy?lifters are removable without splitting the crank case.....tappets are not.
I prefer my BBF but I see your point.How do you split the case of a small block Chevy?
Now to take the conversation into even deeper woods, would you say that a "typical" lifer is hydraulic?
The difference would be in the engine you talk about and even then, they vary from model to model.normally lifters have rollers on the bottom, where as a tappet is normally flat.
Tom would know, but I have to assume that newer model engines have roller lifters now.
So...tappets are nothing more than a lifter? Why am I just learning about this...Is there a physical difference in them from a typical lifter?
Not on overhead cam engines.lifters are removable without splitting the crank case.....tappets are not.
How do you split the case of a small block Chevy?
What? You never heard of Click and Clack, the Tappet Brothers???
All they do is wear in a different manner, as many racers have found out.I'd much prefer roller lifters anyway, smooth operation and less surface area to rub.
what aircraft?How do you split the case of a small block Chevy?
Personally I think a lot of the problems of right-side Lycoming cylinders are related to startup and the tangential oil spray pattern from the main and rod bearing shells combined with the high location of the camshaft.
hydraulic lifters are pure genius.
The pressure applied to the lifter is less significant than the pumping pressure the lifter develops.The Lycoming tappet paper is most intriguing to me, but I have trouble with the author's statement that the gallery oil pressure is less on one side vs the other side of the engine. Yes, there would be a measureable difference but I'd bet it is less than a few percent since the port sizes in the crankcase are generous compared to the minor bleedoffs of the bearings etc.
Personally I think a lot of the problems of right-side Lycoming cylinders are related to startup and the tangential oil spray pattern from the main and rod bearing shells combined with the high location of the camshaft.
The authors obviously know a lot about hydraulics etc & it would be fun to split a 6 pack with them some afternoon. I gotta study it some more.
what?....The pressure applied to the lifter is less significant than the pumping pressure the lifter develops.
You didn't know a hydraulic lifter has a pumping action?what?....
it pumps?You didn't know a hydraulic lifter has a pumping action?
Yeah, that's how my '66 Mustang lubricates the valve trainit pumps?
Tappets, Lifters; tomato, tomaato. They both do the same job, and the terms are used interchangeably.So...tappets are nothing more than a lifter? Why am I just learning about this...Is there a physical difference in them from a typical lifter?