Dim
Well-Known Member
In fact it’s not that I’m worried about the engine . I take good care of him and respect him when he’s cold . It’s just I don’t really like it . 1) engine sound isn’t so good in stock exhaust and I truly believe It’s an habit due to my cars experience . Always driving turbo Diesel engine who are full of torque and power in low rev . I have to learn and adapt to the 3.6 . And everything will be fine coz it’s at the end a great companion . Very very smoothSaab did an endurance run in the late 80s where they ran a 3 Saab 9000s around Taladega for 30 days non stop. Flat out. Full throttle at max speed, roughly 6000 rpm. Nothing broke.
Subaru did a similar test in 1989 when they introduced the "high performance" Legacy with 140 hp. (It was high performance in comparison to their previous 4 cylinder cars which made about 90 hp). They ran three Legacys for 100,000 kilometers flat out at an average speed over 135 mph. Likely between 6000 and 6500 rpm.
And they did fine.
So in summary. If you worry about running your engine to 5000 rpm every once in a while, you are worrying about nothing.
Unless you run a high mile engine easy fir its entire life and that forms a step on the bore where the rings stop their upward travel. Then you run the engine hard and because of rod stretch, the rings slam into the step cracking a ring.
The solution is not to never rev your engine. The solution is to rev your engine from when its new so the step doesn't form. Or at the least forms farther up the bore.
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