slowdude Posted August 18 Author Share Posted August 18 Update, and for anyone else who goes through this with a rover k series. K series with stock flywheel. 20 degree ignition advance @ 180 degrees. K series with lightweight flywheel, 12 degree ignition advance @ 151 degrees. Timing dependent upon cams BUT this should help someone get into the right ballpark. Up and running, need to burp the coolant system and then go drive it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
yellowss7 Posted August 18 Share Posted August 18 Good job. I’m hoping to get my Rover K powered Caterham ready for the NJMP event. Hope to see you there. Tom 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
slowdude Posted August 18 Author Share Posted August 18 2 hours ago, yellowss7 said: Good job. I’m hoping to get my Rover K powered Caterham ready for the NJMP event. Hope to see you there. Tom Absolutely. Would love to compare notes etc, see exhausts. This engine sounds fantastic up high in the Rev range. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Outbound Posted August 21 Share Posted August 21 How does the revs feel with the lightened flywheel vs the original? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
slowdude Posted August 25 Author Share Posted August 25 On 8/20/2024 at 11:15 PM, Outbound said: How does the revs feel with the lightened flywheel vs the original? Finally bled the coolant and adjusted the clutch. Took it out for a 35 mile loop. Car accelerates much quicker, feels like it is faster (even though it probably isn't). Engine braking is significantly more noticeable (think motorcycle levels of engine braking). Flywheel does require some finer tuning. Car is lugging less in wierd Rev ranges (40mph, 4th gear, 1300 rpm), because I don't think the map is pushing fuel/timing based on throttle sensor). Instead of lugging, it sounds almost like a misfire. It's stumbling. Acceleration fixes it. Since I'm only in that Rev range because I want to brake in the clutch nice and easy, I don't think it's a problem to worry about. If you're not on an unlocked ECU, I could see a new flywheel wreaking a bit of havoc with throttle load sites. I'd definitely do a flywheel upgrade. It's significantly noticeable but you'd need to do some real fine tuning. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
slowdude Posted September 28 Author Share Posted September 28 (edited) Track day was eventful. Heater hose popped off and spewed everywhere. Thought it was on. Thankfully the car didnt overheat etc. As always @NSXguy is a saint and helped with this and also a clutch adjustment. Car was running great on the track for each session and engine pulled very, very hard. Riot in the high revs. Took the car to the office the week after; still getting the wierd misfire after 20 minutes or so of driving. I'm seeing im losing coolant (overflow tank being low etc). Oil is clear, coolant tank is clear, no smoke or smell of burning. So went down the rabbit hole of coolant leaks and issues via the MG rover forums here: LINKY Since I touched the intake manifold when doing the clutch, It looks like I may have not put enough sealant around the intake by cylinder 1. I pulled the plugs and checked cylinder 1 vs cylinder 3. I can see some faint red residuent (red coolant?) by cylinder 1. Cylinder 3 has normal carbon build up. I'll need to revisit the intake manifold gasket and will most likely need a second set of hands to help out as I screwed it up before. Will try and get a leakdown in sometime in the next few weeks just to double check but given performance on the track etc, it looks like its an inlet manifold leak. I know I didnt put enough liquid gasket around the inlet manifold, looking back I should have put some more in. Cylinder 1 looks like it is missing a chunk but its just the photo quality being bad. New plugs and AFR gauge should fix fueling etc. Des has also been on me to get the AFR set up for closed loop fueling; I went nuts and got an AEM programmable gauge, Will use it for water temp, AFR, etc. That required an OBD2 adapter for the ECU, which required additional power, so I went ahead and got creative. @CBuff is an electrical nerd, so bouncing ideas off of him led to getting a separate fuse box with built in relays. I then went one step further and got some apiele switches for fairly cheap, then a sheet of thin aluminum off amazon for $8. I went and widened the horn hole and put a grommet in to prevent chafing (heh). Snaked some wires to test, as I need to re-arrange for the horn etc. plan is to mount the switches on the bulkhead above the E brake and see how it works out. Hoping to get wiring done up this weekend. For anyone who is looking to wire an EU1/2 K Series harness to a wideband, I went through and did the following research based off of Andrew Revill's EU2 loom + the wideband manufacturer to get an idea of how to do my deutsch connectors. Posting the below as I couldnt really find this on the blatchat or various forums, so I hope its helpful. wideband car color purpose pin color purpose red 12v power with fuse to ignition 1 slate positive VE white heater ground 2 light green slate negative VE green signal into ECU pin 10 3 black ground brown simulated narrow band 4 brown blue MFRU relay to pin 10 black sensor ground (ecu pin 29) in theory wiring from wideband to car wideband car red power 12v ignition switch white black green brown blue brown slate black light green slate Edited September 28 by slowdude Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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