You'd be hard pressed to even find a roller bearing in an auto engine or transmission. Comparing my Harley engine to an auto engine is an insult anyway
Sort-of hard to compare a set of preloaded tapered roller bearings to a straight roller too. Different application for different purposes - except with Harley's engineers. They apparently don't understand the difference either. The crank in a Harley heeds the stability of the Timken bearings and that was the thought when the V twin began to get larger and more powerful. Now all of a sudden the Twin Cam doesn't need them? The Pan Head was where HD went away from shims to keep the crank stationary but like the new system, a limited selection of shims are available so the crankshaft is replaced if too much lateral play exists. So, who benefits from this 'just as good' bearing? The Timken set lasted the entire life and then some, of the engine and I doubt seriously that a rebuilder of the current TC will reuse these cartridge, cheap, inadequate bearings. Auto engines use friction bearings with full circle friction thrust bearings too, normally babbit lined inserts. Think HD could do this?
BC
BC,
So, what you're telling me is that you don't want a reliable engine that will last at least 100,000 miles in your Harley?

Well, you're in luck, since I seriously doubt you'll find many of Harley's latest offerings still running strong at 100,000 miles. What you will notice with many of the changes H-D has made in the recent past is that they really don't care about providing anything more than "just barely good enough". They don't want people to be able to easily rebuild their engines, they want to sell new ones. This is a design philosophy that folks like Toyota have made a cornerstone of their business; eliminate the over-engineered parts and make everything just good enough. Why buy rocker arms that will last 250,000 miles, for instance, if the rest of the engine only lasts 100,000 miles?
I stand by my original statement; in
theory, a properly sized and lubricated roller bearing with thrust washers should work fine in place of the higher cost Timken tapered bearings. Would I rather have the Timkens? Sure, if for nothing other than piece of mind. And it would also be helpful if the crankshaft was true and strong enough to stay that way. But I don't believe a stock output engine needs Timkens to survive, and that is obviously the approach Harley is taking. If you want to hot rod your engine, they obviously no longer plan to provide a bottom end that you can leave stock. Now you'll have to spend more to split the cases and upgrade the crank and bearings. Assuming the stock setup is adequate for a stock output level, making it more expensive for someone to seriously increase power isn't something the manufacturer is going to lose any sleep over.
Jerry