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May 13, 2018 6:39 pm
davidbracey Offline
Member
Registered since: Aug 10, 2012
Location: Maidstone, Kent


Subject: 4.5 litre pushrods
I believe that each of the sanction variant engines have different length pushrods. Is that correct?

My S3 engine has longer pushrods than a spare someone gave me but I’ve no idea which sanction it fits.

Does anyone have information of what length suits each engine? I’m interested in getting some made.

David
David Bracey
 

May 14, 2018 1:09 pm
Bill LG45 Offline
Member
Registered since: Sep 24, 2014
Location: -


Subject: Re: 4.5 litre pushrods
Hi David
Sanction 3 push rods are longer and are also of smaller diameter, only clearing the head by a small amount.
A Sanction 3 head with integral inlet tract is deeper than the earlier sanctions which I imagine is the main reason for the difference but the crankcase was also modified / stiffened and has larger studs securing the block to the crankcase so there may be some differences in dimensions there too but I believe it is mainly the depth of the head.
Cheers
Bill
 

May 18, 2018 6:48 pm
davidbracey Offline
Member
Registered since: Aug 10, 2012
Location: Maidstone, Kent


Subject: Re: 4.5 litre pushrods
Thanks Bill.

I now have a sample of both lengths of pushrods so will draw them up properly so that we’ve records. I’ll get prices and then they should be available through the club.

David
David Bracey
 

Jun 23, 2018 9:39 pm
davidbracey Offline
Member
Registered since: Aug 10, 2012
Location: Maidstone, Kent


Subject: Re: 4.5 litre pushrods
The later pushrods are not only longer and have thinner tubes but the ends are swagged to fit the machined ball and cup ends. These reduced diameter swagged ends seem to be a weakness to me.

Is there any reason why the tubes can’t stay the same diameter along their whole length and the machined ends simply insert as an interference fit?

There’s no clearance issues as far as I can see.
David Bracey
This post has been edited 1 times. Last edit on Aug 16, 2018 10:19 am by davidbracey.  

Jun 24, 2018 9:02 am
h14 Offline
Member
Registered since: Nov 30, 2008
Location: Chalandray, France


Subject: Re: 4.5 litre pushrods
Hi,
Why oil into the pushrod tube? The lower end should already be well lubricated. Also, oil in the tube would add weight, not ideal.

Regarding the tube construction, good point, but if the later pushrods are reliable in service, perhaps simply evidence of ongoing improvement/development of the Meadows engine. Sometimes "improvements" are however cost-related, to the detriment of reliability!
Laurence
 

Jun 24, 2018 11:21 am
Colin M34 Offline
Member
Registered since: Dec 01, 2007
Location: Suffolk, UK


Subject: Re: 4.5 litre pushrods
I agree with Laurence,

Back in the dim and distant days of doing my engineering degree we were taught that reciprocating masses need to be as light as possible, especially on valve gear. So perhaps these were results of ongoing improvement on the Sanction 3 Meadows engine by Harry Westlake.

This worthy pushrod engine was superseded by the V12 which of course is an OHC engine.

 

Jun 24, 2018 7:41 pm
davidbracey Offline
Member
Registered since: Aug 10, 2012
Location: Maidstone, Kent


Subject: Re: 4.5 litre pushrods
I’m not sure the later pushrods are reliable in service. One of mine bent at the point where the tube diameter reduces. David Hine tells me that the longer pushrods reliably bend if the engine is taken to 4,500rpm too quickly.
David Bracey
This post has been edited 4 times. Last edit on Aug 16, 2018 10:19 am by davidbracey.  

Jun 25, 2018 10:00 am
h14 Offline
Member
Registered since: Nov 30, 2008
Location: Chalandray, France


Subject: Re: 4.5 litre pushrods
I wondered if that was what you intended. The guiding factor would presumably be whether there is excessive wear otherwise occuring to the lower end of the pushrod and/or tappet. In service these areas are normally fairly flooded with oil. Drilling the upper pushrod cup could be detrimental: the cup would be an oil reservoir; drilling it would transform it into an oil drain, possibly to the detriment of the ball and cup bearing surfaces. More care, thought and science went into the design of engine components in period than we appreciate today. That doesn't mean they always got it right, though!

My LG6 has an S4 engine; no pushrod trouble so far, but then I've rarely approached max. revs. Did once get it up to 105mph on the original 3.58 cwp, which must have been thereabouts. Doubtless the fastest the car had ever gone, given the wind resistance presented by its original saloon body. Higher revs in the lower gears appears to be pointless performancewise, the complete opposite to driving the V12.

Laurence
 

Aug 02, 2018 10:46 am
Julian Offline
Member
Registered since: Dec 04, 2007
Location: Belgium


Subject: Re: 4.5 litre pushrods
Hi
Agree with the above

Never ever seen a pushrod problem on a Meadows 4.5 that can be blamed on pushrod design.
Rockers seized, coil bind of the valve springs, collets hitting guides, pushrods hitting castings or head gasket etc will all caused pushrod issues, but pushrods themselves are immensely strong.
No other engine that I know uses anything even close.
Why “improve”
And certainly not by drilling oil holes thus allowing to fill with oil.
On many American v8 race engines you actually close these holes.

Hope this helps.
Julian
Julian Messent
This post has been edited 1 times. Last edit on Aug 02, 2018 10:48 am by Julian.  

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