italian tune up
Discussion
bought my '92 mx5 4 weeks ago. Its done 85k miles. The 200 mile drive to get it home really loosened it up nicely. Since then I have replaced the coolant and done an oil change to fully synth and its running even better now, with the tappety noise now gone.
I now have one problem...me. My every day driver is a 2.2 diesel with lots of torque so a different driving style, and the neurotic part of my brain tells me that the engine will most likely explode if i get anywhere near that red bit on the rev counter!
My confidence in the reliability of the car is growing and i guess the rev limiter is there for a reason. Also assume that it is probably good to hit the rev limiter (when fully warm) at least once in a while, hopefully more. Convince me it wont go pop please....!!!
I now have one problem...me. My every day driver is a 2.2 diesel with lots of torque so a different driving style, and the neurotic part of my brain tells me that the engine will most likely explode if i get anywhere near that red bit on the rev counter!
My confidence in the reliability of the car is growing and i guess the rev limiter is there for a reason. Also assume that it is probably good to hit the rev limiter (when fully warm) at least once in a while, hopefully more. Convince me it wont go pop please....!!!
bluetone said:
The engine was originally designed to take a turbo (Mazda 323 IIRC) and the reliability of the lower-output MX5 version is legendary, so give it some
It may have been 'based' on the 323 design, but it was not designed for FI. For a start compression ratio is higher on the MX5 lump, and it doesn't boast things like forged pistons which I believe the 323 Turbo lump does.Don't worry - hitting the rev limiter on a well-maintained M1 MX-5 occasionally won't do any harm. I had a M1 MX-5 from new - turboed it (around 240hp) from two years old. I hit the rev limiter many many times while tuning it via laptop. Tough engines to say the least.
While the same engine in OEM turbo applications had changes - compression ratio, flywheel and stronger rods, the fact remains that the stock NA M1 engine is over-engineered. There are thousands of them reliably running superchargers and turbos but admittedly well-tuned forced induction doesn't stress out internals quite as much as you expect. See the following for more details of the stock internals...
http://www.solomiata.com/Mx5Engine.html
While the same engine in OEM turbo applications had changes - compression ratio, flywheel and stronger rods, the fact remains that the stock NA M1 engine is over-engineered. There are thousands of them reliably running superchargers and turbos but admittedly well-tuned forced induction doesn't stress out internals quite as much as you expect. See the following for more details of the stock internals...
http://www.solomiata.com/Mx5Engine.html
Edited by SunDiver on Wednesday 11th March 17:22
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