Have a look at the picture at the top of this thread ,the picture of the new shell on the right is what is supplied with the offset hole for lubricating the thrust side, if you have fitted plain shells in your con-rods the recipient of those engines should be concerned.
This thread is going nowhere, you build your engines how you want to but please be careful not to pass on wrong information to members on this forum.
Really? It's one thing for you to disagree with me but it's a whole other thing to say to me and everyone on this site that I'm passing on wrong information and apparently, by your tone; I'm doing it on purpose. What possible motive could I have in doing that? Trust me, being right, or thinking I am, isn't close to enough reason to even respond. However, inferring that I'm a fraud crosses the line.........
I can be as wrong as anyone around here and I'd be the first one to admit it too. If I'm not sure I say, '' I'm not sure....'' If I'm fairly sure I say, I believe, or I think this or that about a certain subject, and if I know I'm right about something, and I'm certain about it, I say so. In this rare and partiular case, I'm sure about it.
I buy a certain amount of engine parts from Metric Motors in CA. They build about 300 engines per year; I believe all of them are MB. When this question arose some time ago I asked Mike ( the owner ) how to deal with this issue. This is what he told me: ( I asked his permission to quote )
“ NOTE: THESE BEARINGS SUPPLIED ARE AN UPDATED/SUB TO VERSION. OIL HOLES IN ROD BEARING WILL NOT ALIGN WITH THOSE IN ROD... THE HOLES ARE IRRELEVANT. NO PASS THROUGH OIL HOLE IS REQUIRED. AS MOST 130 TYPE RODS HAVE NO OIL HOLES ANYWAY. RUN AS SUPPLIED.”
For the record – This comes from old Germans that were working these vehicles back in the day. Mercedes was having trouble with oil consumption on the M130 engine types partly due to too much oil squirting from the rod to the cylinder wall. So in 1971 they omitted the holes in the rod to alleviate such. We have flipped the bearing around to do the same for over 25 years without any consequence. In fact it’s only an improvement. ''
If Metric Motors is wrong, then I'm also wrong and all of the rebuilt engines done in this manner are apparently junk. Will your engine fail if you use the holes in the rod? I doubt it, but when an enlighted view from an expert comes along does it not behoove a serious student of these cars to pay attention?