Early (85-87) vs 88 V6. Pistons have different compression height?! (Page 1/2)
Raydar NOV 22, 11:08 AM
This question was precipitated by another post where someone was looking for a replacement crank for an 86.
I was thinking that while he was in there, he should just replace the early crank with the 88 crank, since counterweighted flywheels are becoming "uncommon".

But then I remembered hearing that the 88 pistons were somehow "different". So I did a little poking around.

I was thinking that the difference was due to different weights, but that doesn't seem to be the whole story (if that even is a factor.)

Strangely enough (per Rockauto) the '86 compression height is 1.578". The '88 compression height is 1.599". (21 thousandths?)
Since both engines are supposed to have the same stroke (and bore, of course), and the same rods, I'm wondering how this is possible. Unless the 88 just has incrementally higher compression. (Both are "spec'd" at 8.5:1)
How is this supposed to work? Was this change made due to a head gasket or block machining difference?

Thanks!
Gall757 NOV 22, 12:02 PM
What's the 'crush' distance on a head gasket? Seems like it would be more than 21 thousandths.....so you could make up the difference with just a torque change on the head bolts (or a different head gasket).

[This message has been edited by Gall757 (edited 11-22-2020).]

Raydar NOV 22, 12:49 PM

quote
Originally posted by Gall757:

What's the 'crush' distance on a head gasket? Seems like it would be more than 21 thousandths.....so you could make up the difference with just a torque change on the head bolts (or a different head gasket).




Which makes sense. I just wondered if I was missing something.

fierogt28 NOV 22, 11:59 PM
The 88V6 pistons were over 14mm shorter and 3 ounces lighter.

My opinion, I always found the 88V6 engine was smoother running than the externally balanced 85-87V6.

I know, I have 87V6 and 88V6 engines in both 88 Fieros.

------------------
fierogt28

88 GT, Loaded, 5-speed.
88 GT, 5-speed. Beechwood interior, All original.

BillS NOV 23, 02:23 PM
OK, if the pistons were shorter and the rods didn't change, the compression height is lower, which means that if the heads didn't change (they didn't AFAIK), the compression ratio was lower. But I had understood that all the HO engine versions were 8.9 compression. So something isn't adding up.
Will NOV 23, 02:39 PM

quote
Originally posted by Raydar:
Strangely enough (per Rockauto) the '86 compression height is 1.578". The '88 compression height is 1.599". (21 thousandths?)
[...] (Both are "spec'd" at 8.5:1)

Thanks!




quote
Originally posted by fierogt28:

The 88V6 pistons were over 14mm shorter and 3 ounces lighter.




quote
Originally posted by BillS:

OK, if the pistons were shorter and the rods didn't change, the compression height is lower, which means that if the heads didn't change (they didn't AFAIK), the compression ratio was lower. But I had understood that all the HO engine versions were 8.9 compression. So something isn't adding up.



The numbers Raydar found show the '88 pistons *taller* which jives with the idea that the later engines had slightly higher compression. I'd always read that the Fiero engines were 8.9:1... maybe the prior low output 2.8's were 8.5:1.

fierogt28's post has a... let's call it a typo
fierogt28 NOV 24, 11:47 PM
Thanks Will...

What I meant was the stock 88V6 pistons where 14.8mm shorter than the 85-87V6 pistons. From the top of the
piston to the bottom skirt. And 3.3 ounces lighter than the 85-87V6 stock pistons.

I have a spare 88V6 stock block, and when it comes apart, I will confirm measurements with what info was supplied.

This info comes from the NIFE fiero tech book.

I guess all rebuilt kits available today have the same pistons listed / made for 85-88V6s...even if the 88V6 pistons were shorter.

The specs have been listed at 8.5:1 and 8.9:1. There might be something here...


------------------
fierogt28

88 GT, Loaded, 5-speed.
88 GT, 5-speed. Beechwood interior, All original.

fierogt28 NOV 24, 11:58 PM
IIRC, the top of the 88V6 stock pistons are flat...

Are the top of the 85-87V6s stock pistons rounded slightly?
pmbrunelle NOV 25, 12:12 AM
I've taken apart two 85 V6 engines, and both had flat-top pistons.
Gall757 NOV 25, 10:57 AM

quote
Originally posted by fierogt28:

The specs have been listed at 8.5:1 and 8.9:1. There might be something here...




Assuming connecting rods are all the same, what you need is a dimension from the center of the wrist pin to the top of the piston (not easy to measure accurately.... )

[This message has been edited by Gall757 (edited 11-25-2020).]