Kennomini wrote:
I wouldn't think this be a "safe" idea. It may be practical on race motors where they are being pulled down on a very regular basis so not dealing with the tabs would save some time. Their designed to prevent bolts and nuts from coming loose.
Yes they were, but back then they were made from real aussie or UK steel, not made in PRC from magnetic cheese.
If you give it a good rev (miss a gear) the tabs collapse, you then have lost bolt tension on the assembly.
Most 1275s had no main bearing locktabs anyway. Or rod bolt ones.
ARP fasteners recommend use their moly lube and torque to give a bolt stretch dimension (on their rod bolts). It is the elastic stretch of the bolt when torqued up that keeps it tight, not a cheesy lock tab.
They recommend use this moly on their main bolts too.
[edit] The problem with using Loctite is the heat from torquing them up can hasten it setting, so the actual torque is not correct. I used to use it but not any more.
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DrMini- 1970 wasaMatic 1360, Mk1S crank, 86.6HP (ATW) =~125 @ crank, 45 Dellorto (38 chokes), RE282 sprint cam, 1.5 rockers, 11.0:1 C/R.
