Survey – How Do You Consume Engine Info? - Engine Builder Magazine

Survey – How Do You Consume Engine Info?

Dear Engine Builder readers – In order to bring you better content, Engine Builder would like to ask its print and digital readers a few questions about how they consume information about engines. This survey will only take three or four minutes, and your answers will be kept confidential and only reported in the aggregate. 

Take the survey

Once you finish the survey, you can enter for a chance to win a $100 gift card, which you can select from a list of national retailers like Home Depot, Lowe’s or Walmart. Can’t finish your survey at once? Your answers are saved, and if you follow the link back you will be taken to where you left off. 

Any questions? Contact Babcox Media’s Audience Insights Manager Bruce Kratofil at [email protected].

You May Also Like

Perfecting Ring Seal Soup

Using modern honing machines, surface finishes, crosshatch angles, ring materials, and coatings all combine to create a more efficient engine.

A Combination of Oil, Surface Finish & Crosshatch

If you’ve been following along in the pages of Engine Builder lately, or have spoken to anyone at Total Seal or Rottler in the last couple years, you already know the mantra of “oil is the gasket.” Microscopic surface roughness and waviness create leak paths, especially under high cylinder pressures. These peaks and valleys exist, not just on the block and head surface, but on the cylinder walls, piston rings and piston ring grooves. That’s where motor oil acts like a gasket to seal those components together. 

Connecting Rod Stress

Connecting rods are subject to constant stress through extreme tensile and compressive loads, each one tied to a different aspect of operation.

Balancing, A State of Equilibrium

The balance of a rotating assembly is critical in every aspect and for every engine.

Factors of Crankshaft Selection

From the high-performance powerplants propelling Top Fuel dragsters to the subdued engines found in family sedans and grocery getters, each crank must be tailored to, and appropriate for, its specific application.

Shop Solutions March 2024

I always keep a pair of needle nose pliers and a small, straight screwdriver in my blast cabinet to hold small parts when blasting.

Other Posts

A Deep Dive on Crankshafts at Callies Performance Products

We made a visit to Fostoria, OH recently to sit down with Callies President Heath Norton, Sales Manager Brook Piper and engine builder Billy Briggs of Billy Briggs Racing Engines to discuss the latest in crankshaft technology, trends and manufacturing. Check out this episode of Intellectual Horsepower brought to you by Callies Performance Products. Related

Why Oil and Fluid Analysis Makes Your Engine and Transmission Healthier

Much like a doctor’s visit for your own health, there’s no better way to understand what’s going on inside your engine and transmission than by having a fluid analysis performed. The process is not difficult, but having an expert discuss the results with you can be a game changer for the health and life of

Transtar Industries to Begin Offering OE Recycled Engines

The engines are priced and graded based on part condition and mileage. All recycled engines are backed by a 90-day warranty.

Maine Rejects ICE Ban

The Maine Board of Environmental Protection has voted against the proposal to align the state with California’s latest clean-car rules.