Compression Ratio / Racing Fuel
Compression Ratio / Racing Fuel
Author
Discussion

slickshoot

Original Poster:

26 posts

204 months

Friday 10th July 2015
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I have a classic mini that I race in which I use either a 1293cc or a 1380cc depending on which is feeling the most healthy at any given time. Both of the engines were recently rebuilt & the was dropped into the car, put on the rollers but then first time out the engine failed. We dropped the other engine in for the next event which also then failed. Upon closer inspection the head gasket had gone on both engines, blowing a hole in exactly the same place on both engines between cylinders 1 & 2, fatally damaging the block on the 1380 in that same spot. I have ran these engines without any similar issues for the past 5 years or so. I have since had the 1293cc engine rebuilt (by an alternative engine builder) who pointed the finger of the problem at the fuel we used (Shell V-Power Nitro+). Now we have used this fuel for 5 years or so with these engines & for many years previous to that with other performance A series engines with no bother. Our engine builder is adamant this was the cause but I feel it's strange that this problem seems to have just emerged out of the blue so I'm still eager to consider other causes. The 1293cc that we've just had rebuilt following this issue was running a compression ratio of 12.4:1 before the blowup & 12.6:1 now (following a head skim) so I realise the compression is at the higher end of the scale. The only other areas I feel could be relevant are cam timing & the electronic timing (running a Polestar ECU).

The fuel I would ideally use (Sunoco R6SR) is designed for engines with compression ratios up to 13:1 but is not allowed in the MSA Blue Book meaning I would be running ilegal if I use it so any thoughts & comments would be appreciated as I really need to get to the bottom of this.

Many thanks!

350Matt

3,830 posts

295 months

Sunday 12th July 2015
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I very much doubt its the fuel

get a knock sensor on the block for its next outing and plumb it up to a suitable kncok box