GregP
Major
Hi Shortround,
Not arguing with you at all here, but I have seen maybe 200 Allison crankshafts. They were all one of two varieties.
One has 6 counterweights on it and the other has 12 counterweights on it. Now, they made a lot of Allisons and 200 is not a large sample when looking at the total, but the actual crankshafts look pretty identical with the exception of counterweights, finish-wise, especially after using a crank polisher.
I don't know if the V-1710 Allison boat engine had a different crankshaft or not. I've seen one boat engine, but we didn't disassemble it because we only did that when we went to overhaul it and nobody was ordering a boat Allison from Joe Yancey while I was around there. I'd love to put one in a boat, for sure! There is also some mention of an unsupercharged version of the V-1710 that I have not seen and do not know if the crankshaft might be different, either. I think not for both because the crankshaft fits within the power section and bolts to whatever it turns in front or out back. The crankshaft itself has some 55 - 60 individual parts that take an assembly setup. Once assembled it doesn't need periodic tightening.
None of the above means they didn't have the cranks and crank issues you mentioned above. I just haven't seen them in my time with Allisons out of the approximately 150 Allisons I have seen up close and personal.. Still, Joe's collection of Allisons was not "cherry picked." He bought where he found them in fields, barns, etc. You'd THINK some other type of crankshaft would show up in a random sample of 150 Allisons if very many were made. But, hey, maybe not.
Joe had a 6-counterweight crankshaft spin up to 4,500 rpm in a tractor engine in Europe without damage. They shipped it back to him and he couldn't find anything wrong with it, even after magnaflux. It's back in the tractor and running as you read this.
Not arguing with you at all here, but I have seen maybe 200 Allison crankshafts. They were all one of two varieties.
One has 6 counterweights on it and the other has 12 counterweights on it. Now, they made a lot of Allisons and 200 is not a large sample when looking at the total, but the actual crankshafts look pretty identical with the exception of counterweights, finish-wise, especially after using a crank polisher.
I don't know if the V-1710 Allison boat engine had a different crankshaft or not. I've seen one boat engine, but we didn't disassemble it because we only did that when we went to overhaul it and nobody was ordering a boat Allison from Joe Yancey while I was around there. I'd love to put one in a boat, for sure! There is also some mention of an unsupercharged version of the V-1710 that I have not seen and do not know if the crankshaft might be different, either. I think not for both because the crankshaft fits within the power section and bolts to whatever it turns in front or out back. The crankshaft itself has some 55 - 60 individual parts that take an assembly setup. Once assembled it doesn't need periodic tightening.
None of the above means they didn't have the cranks and crank issues you mentioned above. I just haven't seen them in my time with Allisons out of the approximately 150 Allisons I have seen up close and personal.. Still, Joe's collection of Allisons was not "cherry picked." He bought where he found them in fields, barns, etc. You'd THINK some other type of crankshaft would show up in a random sample of 150 Allisons if very many were made. But, hey, maybe not.
Joe had a 6-counterweight crankshaft spin up to 4,500 rpm in a tractor engine in Europe without damage. They shipped it back to him and he couldn't find anything wrong with it, even after magnaflux. It's back in the tractor and running as you read this.
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