by bgsengine » Sun Feb 21, 2021 10:56 pm
Well, .023 vs .018 new, I would think would represent rather little wear.. (Normally to judge wear I just look at the oil control ring on those, and see how wide the "flats" on the ring look compared to new ones, which might look to be about 1/32 - 1/64 inch wide.. I never measured them, just "eyeballed" them..) if all else seems to be within tolerances (not over reject size) being a koolbore, if you don't have a set of new rings handy, I'd have no hesitation at re-using old rings.. I'd never hone a koolbore (aluminum bore) - aluminum tends to "ball up" in typical honing stones and you risk digging deep grooves - If you can still see the crosshatch in a koolbore, I'd call it in pretty good shape.. aluminum bore, if it is past reject limits, only real thing to do would send it out to a machine shop to have it bored (NOT with any kind of boring stones - ONLY with a milling machine type cutter, followed by light honing using stones specifically for aluminum) In other words, unless you have high quality, perfectly dressed honing bar stones specifically designed for aluminum bore, I'd not even think about honing... and given your ring end gaps, which don't seem too terrible, if your oil control ring seems to be relatively in good shape, I'd probably say re-use... (of course assuming your rings don't have too much variation in thicknesses around their circumference)
And as for my detailed explanations - It simply is a matter of learning and understanding the why and how something works, then those basics can be applied largely to pretty much anything else of a similar design.. .. I have always thought, if you can't explain the why and how of something, you really don't know as much as you think you do...
How poor are they who have not patience. What wound did ever heal, but by degrees? - Iago (Othello Act II, Scene 3)