Jeff Ivers
Well-known member
I once used plasti-gauge, but will never use it again. Years ago, I took an MGB engine in for boring and align bore, etc. Got the engine back, used plasti-gauge, assembled the engine, drove it 10,000 miles and spun a rod bearing. Took it apart, took the block to a second machine shop, told them the history and asked them to verify the block was good and if so do necessary machining. Got the engine back, drove it 10,000 miles, and spun a rod bearing. Went out and bought micrometers and telescoping gauges, etc and started testing everything myself. The original line bore had wobbled the boring bar in the horizontal plane so the clearance there was like .03 inches instead of .003 on the number one cylinder. Plasti-gauge cannot detect a major machining error like that (only tests in the vertical plane). Interestingly, I took the block to a 3rd machine shop, one known for race engine prep, told them the whole story and asked if the block was still usable or needed to be trashed. They called me up and told me the block was ready to go, charged me for all the machine work. I took the block home, checked everything and found they had not corrected the problem. Took the block back to them and proved it and then they did a different block at no charge. That engine ran for many years and was still going strong when the car was parked.



