SSGM Article
Thorough cleaning of the base components is essential to a quality rebuild. CrossTown uses an environmentally friendly in a shot blast cabinet, producing an O.E. level of cleanliness. CrossTown’s Lou Mangov points to a critical area: the block deck.


Cylinder boring is indexed off the pan rails, and is also automated.


Honing is by Sunnen CK 10. Blocks are than steam-cleaned.


Heads receive valve seats as necessary and are three-angle cut using dedicated equipment. Note that the Sunnen machine indexes off the gasket mating surface.


Heads receive the same cleaning treatment as blocks, and are Magna-fluxed to detect cracks. Aluminum heads are pressure tested. The milling machine uses a cubic boron nitride fly cutter to produce a very good surface finish in a single pass.


After all components are cleaned, assembly is performed at a central station. Engine internals other than those remanufactured in-house are new.


Worn journals are built up by automatic welding, then ground to original size. Mangov notes that 5.0L Ford crankshafts often show considerable wear on their thrust faces.


Complete engines are tested on a hydraulic machine that spins the units to 450 RPM. The test checks oil pressure and smooth operation. Note the driveshaft from the hydraulic motor to the crank on this 4.6L Ford V-8. Engines are primed, and oil falls into a large sump inside the machine.

