Vandervell main bearings made in England


http://209.208.111.198/Topic28197.aspx
Print Topic | Close Window

By 46yblock - 16 Years Ago
I received some main bearings today, Vandervell brand.  Does anyone have experience with the brand?  They were received in unusable condition, very beat up apparently due to banging into each other during shipping.  I lightly ran a fingernail accross the scars to get a better sense of the damage, and my nail left a mark.  The material seems very soft. 
By mctim64 - 16 Years Ago
Vandervell is a very good quality bearing, I have used them for years in British cars. We used to stock them at the shop but you don't see them much any more.
By Pete 55Tbird - 16 Years Ago
If I recall correctly these were tri metal bearings Lead, tin, and copper. They were excellent bearings.
By 46yblock - 16 Years Ago
Glad to hear the positives.  They are supposed to ship another set (or partial set) soon.  The 4 I received excluded the thrust bearing, but I have a Federal Mogul center on hand.
By Park Olson - 16 Years Ago
I had problems with Vandervell in a 292 rebuild of some years ago, took it down recently for other work, in rechecking ,found that the brg. shells were not of consistant thickness. as much as .002 diff. on some. Thinner towards the split edge. I too had no "apparant" problems years ago, '70's, with Vandervell's in Spridget motors. Moral here,,,,,,CHECK EVERYTHING!    These were rod brearings.
By pegleg - 16 Years Ago
mctim64 (6/24/2009)
Vandervell is a very good quality bearing, I have used them for years in British cars. We used to stock them at the shop but you don't see them much any more.

     Used to be very popular for English cars. They even produced and raced an entire Formula one car back in the fifties.

By Hoosier Hurricane - 16 Years Ago
Park:

Check an American made bearing, or read a bearing catalog.  The bearings are designed to be thinner toward the part lines.  They are designed with some crush, so that when you tighten the caps they are forced into the bore for full and tight contact.  The taper prevents the bearing from pinching inward toward the crank and making for tight spots.