gruntguru wrote:godlameroso wrote:gruntguru wrote:
A brief drop in oil pressure is all it takes and a rod bearing is usually the first to go. The process is:
- temporary breakdown of oil film
- temporary metal-metal contact removes some material from the surface of the bearing shell
- Increased clearance means rod can "hammer" up and down on the crank
- hammering increases clearance
- bearing shell begins to spin in the rod (probably)
- repeat last 4 steps until rod breaks (bearing cap parts company with rod) and escapes crankcase area
The other bearings in the engine will exhibit damage ranging from "nothing at all" to severe.
Don't forget the possibility of a bearing rotating in it's bore and starving that journal of oil.
Good point - forgot to mention that possibility (probability in fact)
The point I do not like about the list is, that is covers more a classic sinter 2-layer bearing (for example 0.5mm AlSn15Cu on Al, or the lead containing equivalent).
F1, or modern motorsports in general uses bearings with a 10 micron sputter layer of for example AlSn20Cu (or again with lead, as it must not comply with European law). As soon as material is removed, the bearing is gone. The next thing is, that it jams. Rotating is just a result of jamming, can happen must not happen.
On these bearing there is also nothing like no damage visible on the other bearings, if there was a temporary breakdown of the oil supply. They do not have a wearing layer, so as soon as they touch metal you will see marks, that should not be there at all.
A local breakdown of oil supply without finding the part that causes it after the failure, is hard to imagine for me. A piece big enough to block the oil supply should not be behind the oil filter and if it is, the engine will be gone after one lap. The same accounts for a particle, which might have gone into the bearing.
Both theories also do not fit the change of oil.
To me it looks 100% like a cooling issue. Ham was going flat to get past Button and the oil temp went too high due to bad cooling behind another car.