
Gold Seal And Silver Seal Engines
#1
Posted 28 November 2008 - 01:23 PM
#2
Posted 28 November 2008 - 01:46 PM
Silver seal engines are made out of wrecked gold seal engines and the scrapy leftovers of the day shift... So goes the fairy-tale...

I guess it's a matter of quality, realy.
Gold seal is a replacement engine, silver seal is a cheap replacement with no good quality.
Might be wrong - this is what I've been told by a Mini-mechanic

Cheers,
Jan
#3
Posted 28 November 2008 - 01:50 PM
#4
Posted 28 November 2008 - 01:54 PM
My GT had a silver seal engine in it when i stripped it down i found the bores had been linered so some time in the past the bores had gone and rather than provide a new engine they just repaired the block and gave it a new silver seal engine number!
Edited by Stewart_GT, 28 November 2008 - 01:54 PM.
#5
Posted 28 November 2008 - 02:02 PM
#6
Posted 28 November 2008 - 02:06 PM
#7
Posted 28 November 2008 - 02:25 PM
Gold and Silver Seal engines are both factory re-cons and have a generally good reputation for longevity and quality. Gold Seals have more parts replaced with new than Silver Seals, which use more re-conditioned parts. Both were complete engines I believe but I could be wrong.
Edited by Dan, 28 November 2008 - 02:31 PM.
#8
Posted 28 November 2008 - 02:29 PM
Gold seal engines are cr/\p,
Silver seal engines are made out of wrecked gold seal engines and the scrapy leftovers of the day shift... So goes the fairy-tale...
I guess it's a matter of quality, realy.
Gold seal is a replacement engine, silver seal is a cheap replacement with no good quality.
Might be wrong - this is what I've been told by a Mini-mechanic
Don't give out incorrect advice - if you don't know the answer, don't post!
Goldseal engines were factory reconditioned units as in they were built at Morris Engines in Coventry to as new standards. They were as good as new units and came with 12 months warranty.
Originally Goldeseal units were available as complete or short engines. The Silverseal brand came later and became the short engine side of the business.
The fact that a Goldseal engine has liners in doesn't mean anything as many new engines were also fitted with liners. There is nothing wrong with liners if they are fitted properly.
#9
Posted 28 November 2008 - 02:42 PM
#10
Posted 28 November 2008 - 07:48 PM
#11
Posted 28 November 2008 - 11:43 PM
#12
Posted 29 November 2008 - 12:27 PM
Absolutely not, in fact in a standard engine liners are a great thing. An A series with liners will last a lot longer than a bare block. The only time when liners cause a problem is if you want to overbore the block.
interesting thread, but sorry to hijack, using liners I assume you can use a 1380 block and line it back to 1275- possible giving life to knackered/ scored over bored blocks?
#13
Posted 29 November 2008 - 02:46 PM
I assume you can use a 1380 block and line it back to 1275- possible giving life to knackered/ scored over bored blocks?
I'm not totally sure, iwas under the impression this might not be possible on 1380 as the bores are offset.... not 100% however.
#14
Posted 29 November 2008 - 07:13 PM
all at the same time, that way they kept there cost down so I read somewhere.
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