Brush Research FLEX-HONE Cylinder Hone, BC Series, Silicon Carbide Abrasive, 3 (76 mm) Diameter, 240 Grit Size
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Leonard P.
Greater than one weekI was putting in new rings, but had a glaze on the cylinder bore. this quickly removed the glaze and will allow the new rings to seat properly.
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carpenter
> 3 dayThese are very easy to use Time will tell how long they last
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Tom
> 3 dayI have personally relied on products from this company for a very long time in a professional setting. As far as ball Hones go Flex-Hone is the best and has been. The quality is top notch and the number of sizes they make are unequalled by any other company
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BigNaz
> 3 dayUsed this to hone both cylinders of a 22 hp Briggs VTwin lawn tractor engine that needed a new connecting rod, a new piston and 2 sets of rings. Honing the cylinders is needed to allow the rings to break in and seat properly. Since I don’t expect to do this regularly I was between a cheap set of honing stones for around $20 and the Flex hone which I’d seen on YouTube and was selling on Amazon for $37. The reviews on the honing stones were terrible (cheaply made and inconsistent result) and the flex tool reviews while not numerous were mostly positive. Several excellent YouTube videos by the manufacturer and a call to the seller about whether the 3 inch (180 grit) tool would be good for my 2.96 inch cylinder convinced me it would be worth the extra cost for the Flex hone tool. What a FANTASTIC result in less than 10 minutes to do both cylinders following the video instructions of coating the tool with clean oil and moving in and out of each cylinder for 1 minute. Perfect cross hatched pattern on both. Great tool and good value considering the $200 of parts and many hours of labor to complete this project.
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Björn Turesson
> 3 dayI use it for cleaning up a ported cylinder
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michael h.
> 3 dayThere was nothing to dislike safe and easy to use takes guesswork out of cylinder honing
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Mr. Fix-it Customer
> 3 dayWorked great for what I needed, it is important to know how to use this tool before you try to use it. And it’s suggest using 10W-30, I saw some use transmission fluid, I actually used vegetable oil with great results.
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MD
Greater than one weekUsed this for my Predator 212cc go kart build, where I was swapping to a flat top piston for additional compression. While the cylinder didn’t look bad to begin with, this hone made it look great. I coated the hone in oil and utilized it for around 30 seconds per the instructions. Can’t wait to use its again on the next build!
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Mr. Fix-it Customer
> 3 dayWorked great for what I needed, it is important to know how to use this tool before you try to use it. And it’s suggest using 10W-30, I saw some use transmission fluid, I actually used vegetable oil with great results.
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Quualudes
> 3 daySo I have this 1982 Honda Magna I recently acquired which needs some love to get back on the road. Apparently the previous owner dropped the bike while loading it on a trailer, decided not to fix it and let it sit for a few years. The sight glass was busted on the clutch master cylinder so the fluids drained out of the main chamber and after a few years of sitting, the rest of the fluid turned into some kind of green alien substance... After stripping some screws trying to get the thing took apart, I discovered the piston was quite stuck in the chamber - which required me to drill through the top of the piston, insert a metal screw and pry the b***h out with a crowbar. What I found in the chamber was nothing short of horrific - a nice thick black coating of whatever the brake fluid turned into after all these years. It looked like carbon, and it was impossible to get scrubbed out with brass bore cleaners or soaked out with anything I had available (which is a lot of stuff). I searched around for potential replacements on eBay, but there was nothing that looked like it would be a sure buy that would work - especially for the money these people were asking. So, I have to make this work... Eventually I gave up on the fruitless manual labor and tried to find another solution. Stumbled across honing engine cylinder and started looking for really small honing tools (5/8 or 16 mm). Found this, got it today, attached it to my drill, doused the cylinder and this tool with brake fluid for lubrication and let it go to work.... Freaking awesome results!!!! I got the 120 grit one, so once I get the OEM rebuild kit here, I will do a test fit and if things look snug, I will get the 320 grit brush and finish it up. Very happy to finally be able to move past the roadblock and get onto other stuff on this bike!!!