|
RX-7 2nd Gen Specific (1986-92) RX-7 1986-92 Discussion including performance modifications and technical support sections. |
Welcome to Rotary Car Club. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us. |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
02-23-2009, 02:03 PM | #1 |
RCC Loves Me Not You
|
Apex Seals
So I'm thinking I may pick up some new Apex seals to replace the old 3 piece seals I have but I'm a little concerned on which Apex seals to pick up for the right money.
My application is a turbo charged 6PI that will see within the first few months of rebuild (after break in) 5-8psi. Eventually I'll push the car to more pressure but only to achieve 300~hp and that will not be until I have enough to rebuild, or build a new engine from scratch to drop in off the bat. As of right now I'm thinking of just picking up the regular Atkins seals but I'd like some opinions: Would it be anymore beneficial if I pick up the cryogenically treated Atkins seals? What about the one piece racing seals that Atkins sell? What about the RA seals? The RA super seals? I'm not planning on running tons of boost pressure on a high compression ratio while in school, but I would like to have a reliable car that can handle tuning and still be okay to drive for quite some time. Any suggestions?
__________________
The Official FC Radiator Thread My Project Thread: Cerberus CCVT Virginia Rotary Group |
02-23-2009, 02:29 PM | #2 | |
rotors excite me
|
Here's what I've heard/read:
People have had good success with the regular Atkins seals, just make sure you clearance them (as you should ANYWAY, but some people think "Hey, they're new so I can just throw them in the motor and they'll work right." That's not always true, clearance your seals and you won't have to wonder if they're right or not. Plus, housings (especially used ones) differ in thickness, which is a big reason you have to clearance your seals.) I've heard that the Rotary Aviation seals are harsh on the housings, that the housings take more of the wear than the seals, and you want it the other way around. I would bet you wouldn't need the one piece seals, but they would probably work ok (however I don't know much about the one piece design versus two piece). They may not seal quite as well as the two piece design, but they might be slightly more durable. I honestly don't know for sure though, and just look at Kevin Lander's FC build to find out how important it is to use the newest, most expensive, flashiest sounding products. Personally, I used new Mazda OEM apex seals with an Atkins kit for everything else. Unless I was going to build a really cheap/expendable motor or a crazy high power output motor (like 500+rwhp on a 13B) then I'll stick with Mazda OEM. They pretty much know their shit about rotaries. Ceramic and carbon seals are available as well as different treatment options, but they're also usually pretty expensive. I think it's highly cautioned against to turbo a motor with carbon seals, too.
__________________
He isn't a killer. He just wins -- thoroughly. '87 TII 240+ rwhp on my DIY streetport, ~13psi on stock turbo, Racing Beat REVTII exhaust rTek 2.1 awaits a tune Quote:
|
|
02-23-2009, 03:14 PM | #3 |
Reliable Source
|
Sounds like an oxy moron
|
02-23-2009, 03:26 PM | #4 | |
rotors excite me
|
The devil is in the details. Good tuning at reasonable outputs will help the motor last, bad tuning can kill a motor fast.
__________________
He isn't a killer. He just wins -- thoroughly. '87 TII 240+ rwhp on my DIY streetport, ~13psi on stock turbo, Racing Beat REVTII exhaust rTek 2.1 awaits a tune Quote:
|
|
02-23-2009, 03:34 PM | #5 |
crash auto?fix auto
|
Yes, you absolutely DO NOT want carbon seals. They are for N/A *only*
Personally, not a big fan of atkins apex seals. Had a strange failure with a set, which may or may not have been the seals themselves, and just lost trust right off the bat. I've run OEM 2mm, 2piece for everything after that, and Iv'e had failures, but they didn't have ANYTHING to do with the seals themselves. The set in my car right now puts down 380whp. ALL OEM. IIRC, mazda apex seals are about $30 each. No experience with RA. Know some guys running ALS, if you want a cheap set of "race" seals get them, they're pretty good. As for benefits over non-race seals, good question. |
02-23-2009, 03:58 PM | #6 | |
rotors excite me
|
They're more like $70 each, at least from Mazdatrix. I got my set about a year ago for I think $300 from someone who didn't want them and that was a good deal back then, too.
http://mazdatrix.com/getprice.asp?partnum=11-C00C-N351
__________________
He isn't a killer. He just wins -- thoroughly. '87 TII 240+ rwhp on my DIY streetport, ~13psi on stock turbo, Racing Beat REVTII exhaust rTek 2.1 awaits a tune Quote:
|
|
02-23-2009, 04:26 PM | #7 |
Respecognize!
|
what im kinda curious about would be how a cryrogeniclly treated seal would behave. The process will make a material have higher overall "toughness" but the fracture point will be much lower. Essentially, in materials, a material will have a point where it will not deform permanently under a load. This is the elastic region. At a certain point called the "yield point". At this point the material will not completely return to its original state once the force is removed. This isnt really a bad thing. The material, especially steel, will become stronger through atomic dislocations. But what really will matter is how large an area of plastic deformation you have to work with. Things like glass have nearly no plastic region and fracture almost before the yield point.
what it means is that the treated material will break before the non treated material as opposed to deformating under a stress. So what i want to know is how exactly will detonation work on such a seal.
__________________
For current updates and event coverage check out Follow on Twitter! @WhizbangRally Whizbang Rally's Webpage | Facebook |
02-23-2009, 04:46 PM | #8 | |
Mod With The Least :P
|
I am running RA Classics and thats what my builder uses for all of his...So far so good
__________________
Resident Post Whore Polluting the environment one revolution at a time. www.tennspeed.net Quote:
|
|
02-28-2009, 11:42 PM | #9 |
The quest for more torque
|
I have heard that if you are driving it on the street, you need mazda seals. The 3 - piece seals make better sealing at low revs (like starting). Unfortunately, I just bought some seals and they don't sell the 3-piece seal anymore.
I am using Mazda seals (they ran the first 75,000 miles just fine, 200,000 in my NA).
__________________
1986 GXL ('87 4-port NA - Haltech E8, LS2 Coils. Defined Autoworks Headers, Dual 2.5" Exhaust (Dual Superflow, dBX mufflers) 1991 Coupe (KYB AGX Shocks, Eibach lowering springs, RB exhaust, Stock and Automatic) |
03-01-2009, 01:42 PM | #11 |
RCC Addict
|
Personally, I think almost every other aftermarket apex seal is CRAP.
I use and recommend Mazda OEM. For super high boost / power applications, you can start to look at the ceramics, if you can stomach the $1,000+ price tag for a set. Ceramics have no real advantage for street cars running under 20psi of boost and making under 500hp. The older 3-piece design was more prone to damage. The newer 2-piece seal is stronger (along the height of the apex seal). The newer 2-piece seal should last longer due to it's design. The sacrifice is sealing was very minimal; there is no reason to want the older 3-piece apex seals anymore. -Ted |