182 Trophy
I'm currently sat on 165k miles and using a lot of oil.
I'm going to start looking at an engine refresh this year, however, I'm unsure of the best way to proceed.
I guess there are a few options;
1. Rebuild current engine, hope crank/bores are in good condition or risk having the car immobile in the case of complications
2. Purchase another engine and leave it alone - hope for the best.
3. Purchase another engine and refresh that with new rings, bearings, arp rod bolts etc.
I'm leaning towards 2 or 3 - any work would have to be DIY and likely involve a steep learning curve, which has me leaning slightly to option 2.
Basically, whilst I'd like to have a crack at a rebuild, I'm ultimately looking for reliability - I can't think of anything more frustrating than coughing up £500 for a track day (with ferries, fuel, hotels and the day etc.) only to end up with engine issues. Plus, I'd like to at least consider getting on a grid somewhere at least a couple of times next year.
That said, given that the car will only ever really be used on track now, I guess it's a battle between the additional reliability by refreshing vs. the potential reliability issues that are down to the quality of the job I do.
I'm sure there are plenty here experienced enough to tell me how difficult a rebuild is likely to be (along with potential expenses) vs. the reliability of a standard engine on average miles. I'm guessing most stuff I find is going to be on 70-110k miles with it's history being pretty much pot luck!
I'd be grateful for any advice/experience offered!
I'm going to start looking at an engine refresh this year, however, I'm unsure of the best way to proceed.
I guess there are a few options;
1. Rebuild current engine, hope crank/bores are in good condition or risk having the car immobile in the case of complications
2. Purchase another engine and leave it alone - hope for the best.
3. Purchase another engine and refresh that with new rings, bearings, arp rod bolts etc.
I'm leaning towards 2 or 3 - any work would have to be DIY and likely involve a steep learning curve, which has me leaning slightly to option 2.
Basically, whilst I'd like to have a crack at a rebuild, I'm ultimately looking for reliability - I can't think of anything more frustrating than coughing up £500 for a track day (with ferries, fuel, hotels and the day etc.) only to end up with engine issues. Plus, I'd like to at least consider getting on a grid somewhere at least a couple of times next year.
That said, given that the car will only ever really be used on track now, I guess it's a battle between the additional reliability by refreshing vs. the potential reliability issues that are down to the quality of the job I do.
I'm sure there are plenty here experienced enough to tell me how difficult a rebuild is likely to be (along with potential expenses) vs. the reliability of a standard engine on average miles. I'm guessing most stuff I find is going to be on 70-110k miles with it's history being pretty much pot luck!
I'd be grateful for any advice/experience offered!