Just a crazy idea I had while at work...Would it be possible to take a gas 16V head, have it shaved down to diesel compression ratios and have the spark plug hole enlarged for TDI injectors?Then the plan would be to bolt it onto a 1.6 hydro block. I'd use headstuds due to the shorter head. The block would have to be bored out to accept 1.9 TDI pisons. Unless it would be better to start with a 1.9 IDI block?I'd imagine custom cams would be needed to avoid valve vs piston confrontations. I was planning on either not running glow plugs or having them in the intake manifold (unless this causes a concern for fires)I'm not sure how the timing belt would workDoes any of this seem feasable? I chose the 16V head since the spark plug is in the center of the cylinder head.
We can't bore and stroke 1.6s to 1.9s?
We can't connect this piston to that rod, and install it in this block?
but has anyone actually tried to put a 16V head on a diesel? Has anyone actually tried to convert a VR6 to diesel? I think the people on this forum deserve to know why these ideas won't work.
What do you mean the engine would only last 1 day? Why would it run poorly? If you're going to give answers like that, I think you ought to explain yourself. VR6s are amoung the toughest engines out there. Could it really be much more than custom pistons, machining the head to accept injectors where the spark plugs are, and mounting a 6-cylinder VE pump? No prechambers, no glow plugs. Did you know that cast-iron turbo manifolds are readily available for the VR6? Can you imagine what kind of power (and sound) a 2.8 or 3.2 liter 4-valve per cylinder turbo-charged VR6 diesel would make? That's why
My dad had one of those mid-80's GM diesel spoofs...1985 Chevy Caprice Station Wagon.... with a "converted" Oldsmobile gas V-8.... In its span it had something like two sets of cylinder heads done on it...a pump and I can't even remember what else... I think this motor was deemed a boat anchor wasn't it?Joe