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SPOOLFOOL2

Fiberglass bumper filler dude. (949) 433-1257
Staff member
Joined
Apr 4, 2002
Messages
6,528
It's that time again. Going to keep this one simple. Just a fun contest that the winner will be picked New years eve.
Best response wins one of my Drip-Lip, oil catch thingies. I call it my stupid idea that works. Also, wanted to thank everyone for all the support for all the crazy stuff I've come up with. I'm happy to say that I'm currently working on some new stuff. Please check out my new-ish website for products and product videos. www.spoolfoolproductions.com


Contest is: Best story of carnage to an engine. It can be minor or catastrophic. More emphasis will be put on entertainment value. Bonus points for pictures.

Big thanks to Shane and all those who have supported this great site over decades. I truly believe that these cars would not be half the legends they are without this place.

Merry Christmas from the boys at Spoolfool Productions.

This should be good.
Mike Barnard
20180322_165659.jpg

So Western Moderator
 
Carnage! I have a carnage story.

Not a buick, though you didn't specify. It was a turbo V6 though.

1994 Ford Probe. I ran this car from 2019 until I sold it in 2024. The engine had almost 300,000 miles on it, so naturally I threw an Ebay kit at it and doubled its output. At the 2021 Pine Mountain Hillclimb, I accidentally did not re-enable the rev limiter. I crossed the finish line at over 8200 RPM. Cracked the ring lands and bent three rods.

1766602579981.png



But that's not the carnage. The carnage is two weeks later. I didn't have time to rebuild the original engine, so I got a junkyard one. It was advertised as having come out of a Probe, but foreshadowing.

At the 2021 Time Trials nationals, I'm cresting the hill known as Tabletop between turns 14 and 15 on my first practice session on Thursday and I hear stuff bouncing off the floor, then the smoke, then the fire starts. I crest the hill at 16 and get the car over to the side and bail out. It's very on fire. Big fire. Looking around, I do not see the safety people coming and the corner workers are not leaving their stations. So I go BACK into the car, get the fire bottle, and proceed to put the fire out myself.

Back in the pits after helping the safety crew pick up the fragments of engine block and letting it cool off we get looking, and the car has multiple holes in the block. You can see straight through it between the first and second set of cylinders.

1766602604277.png

1766603310491.png

1766603331053.png

The block was split top to bottom. It was held together by the heads and the oil pan.
When I tore it down, the damage was epic.


Three rods broke. Three pistons also broken. One of the pistons was rotated 90 degrees in the the bore. The EXHAUST valves on #3 were bent from piston contact.

The root cause? The engine wasn't a Probe engine, which would have had a forged crankshaft. It was from a 1999 Mazda 626 or Millenia, and had a cast crank. The crank bent under load (I found witness marks on the main caps). The Mazda V6 block is extremely rigid, so when that crank got out of shape the block shattered at 7200 rpm along with several rods breaking. Everything cascaded from there. The oil poured onto the exhaust and ignited. A friend that was behind me when it happened said the fireball that came out from under the car was movie-quality. Putting the fire out myself saved the car. We trailered it home, grabbed the Buick and went back down and still ran the rest of the event.

I ended up rebuilding the original engine with all forged guts and ran it without major issues for three more years.

And I don't need to win, I already have a drip lip! But good opportunity to tell a fun story.
 
Last edited:
Merry Christmas !

This all engines or just LC2's?

I haven't had the pleasure of blowing up one of the two LC2's I've owned and driven and giving me a reason to build a more powerful one but I have destroyed a BBC once.

After many years of spraying my 396 (matching numbers btw) then a 454 I decided to upgrade the 454 with higher compression, larger cam, some 074 factory heads and a dominator carb. I never ran without an air cleaner before so I covered the carb with the carb cap after the swap while I wasn't driving it. Well the first time we went to the track I went to start it and pull it off the trailer. It wouldn't start, you see where this is going right? It never would not start up instantly. So I kept trying and when I put the throttle to the floor and continued cranking it started. All I remember ( 30 years ago) was looking down at my tach and seeing the needle around 12 o'clock which is 8500rpm. Then it just stopped, cranking it made a some horrible sounds so I got out to investigate. Pulled the hood and saw my carb cap sideways on top of the carb jamming the throttle wide open. I pulled the carb and saw chunks of aluminum everywhere. I also found out my MSD 7al 7400 rpm chip didn't work. Threw the carb and hood back on and went and had a few beers and watched some racing. Live and learn.
 
Carnage! I have a carnage story.

Not a buick, though you didn't specify. It was a turbo V6 though.

1994 Ford Probe. I ran this car from 2019 until I sold it in 2024. The engine had almost 300,000 miles on it, so naturally I threw an Ebay kit at it and doubled its output. At the 2021 Pine Mountain Hillclimb, I accidentally did not re-enable the rev limiter. I crossed the finish line at over 8200 RPM. Cracked the ring lands and bent three rods.

View attachment 408919


But that's not the carnage. The carnage is two weeks later. I didn't have time to rebuild the original engine, so I got a junkyard one. It was advertised as having come out of a Probe, but foreshadowing.

At the 2021 Time Trials nationals, I'm cresting the hill known as Tabletop between turns 14 and 15 on my first practice session on Thursday and I hear stuff bouncing off the floor, then the smoke, then the fire starts. I crest the hill at 16 and get the car over to the side and bail out. It's very on fire. Big fire. Looking around, I do not see the safety people coming and the corner workers are not leaving their stations. So I go BACK into the car, get the fire bottle, and proceed to put the fire out myself.

Back in the pits after helping the safety crew pick up the fragments of engine block and letting it cool off we get looking, and the car has multiple holes in the block. You can see straight through it between the first and second set of cylinders.

View attachment 408920
View attachment 408921
View attachment 408922
The block was split top to bottom. It was held together by the heads and the oil pan.
When I tore it down, the damage was epic.


Three rods broke. Three pistons also broken. One of the pistons was rotated 90 degrees in the the bore. The EXHAUST valves on #3 were bent from piston contact.

The root cause? The engine wasn't a Probe engine, which would have had a forged crankshaft. It was from a 1999 Mazda 626 or Millenia, and had a cast crank. The crank bent under load (I found witness marks on the main caps). The Mazda V6 block is extremely rigid, so when that crank got out of shape the block shattered at 7200 rpm along with several rods breaking. Everything cascaded from there. The oil poured onto the exhaust and ignited. A friend that was behind me when it happened said the fireball that came out from under the car was movie-quality. Putting the fire out myself saved the car. We trailered it home, grabbed the Buick and went back down and still ran the rest of the event.

I ended up rebuilding the original engine with all forged guts and ran it without major issues for three more years.

And I don't need to win, I already have a drip lip! But good opportunity to tell a fun story.
Damn another rev limiter. PSA on rev limiters here.
 
Any engine type carnage stories welcome.
 
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