Have any of you's guys replaced the connecting rod on a Cox 049/051 piston? Of course I imagine some of you are asking "Why???" Well only because I snapped the rod on an .051 piston and have a few extra .049's laying around. So basically Ihave nothing to lose. Any help or ideas would be great! I am thinking glowing red heat, a firm yank and have the replacement rod ready to pop back in. The question is how to not completely distort the piston.
Second: is there any source available for Fox .35 stuffer plates? I have probably 6 engines that would benefit from it.
I would have my doubts about replacing the rod in a Cox .049/.051. Anything is worth a try to see if it can be done. I think you are on the right track with distorting the piston. I would take a piece of 1/4" plywood and dill a hole big enough for the rod end to pass through, and the piston skirt will sit nice and flat against the other side. Heat the piston as slow as you can and when ready, put the rod through the hole, grab what you can and give it a yank. You are exploring uncharted territory here, so keep us posted on results. I think Cox piston/liner fits were down in the 4 o r 5 decimal places for clearances? That is what you are facing.
I don't know of anyone making the Fox stuffer back plates. using a business card as a gasket will get a stock one in closer. try and measure the clearance from the rod pin to the back plate and see if you can get some Teflon sheet that is a fuzz thinner, and attach it with a rivet right in the middle so the crank pin rotates around it. Seal the rivet on the outside with some JB-Weld. That will get you the same effect with not too much work. If you know anyone that does ceramic coating, it may be possible to coat the surface with enough material to get the gap minimal and still be slick enough for the rod/crank p in to run against it occasionally.
Just my 2-cents,
Dan McEntee