I have had great luck with 94's in the 69 stroke motors I have built. I always though they would be a problem but so far they have out performed my expectations by far. All of the piston/cylinder failures I have investigated were caused by failures in another systems such as ignition timing, fuel delivery or cooling. It seems people often focus on the broken part, the piston, and try to make it stronger without following up on why it failed. The 94's hold up amazingly well in my opinion if the motor is running well but can fail real quick if things go bad in the motor. I run oil temp, oil pressure and dual head temp gauges in two of my three VW's just so I can catch this kind of problem. So far I have fished one shop towel out of the fan. I also tune with a wide band...makes a lot of difference in my opinion.
The last blown piston I fixed ( I blew it up) was in my brothers rail (FI/Turbo). It lunched the piston while I was running sand mountain. I diagnosed the failure was due to a piece of foam weather strip from the gas tank worked its way into the fan and blocked almost all the air flow.
I would love to try the thick wall 92's. 78x92. I don't have a lot of experience running stroked motors on the street. My newest build is in my Baja (86x94) and it seems to be running high oil temps on the highway. I think it would be tough to keep cool in the bus but it sure would make it fly.
Marc wrote:A stroker would be the best choice. My son had a 1995 (88x82, with stock rods) in his `73 bus and it had no problem flat-towing his race bug - even ended up putting taller tires on it 'cause it had so much grunt there was no need to rev it. Problem there is that there are no longer any off-the-shelf "B" pistons in 88mm bore, and going beyond 74mm with "A" pistons brings on some problems. IMO 94s are too thin for a bus (they're only .006" thicker than slip-in 87s). AA also makes some thickwall 92s which fit the same case & head registers as 94s, or you can turn down the skirts so they'll fit a case cut for "classic" 92s/late 90.5s. With a 78mm stroke you'd have 2074cc (2085 if it's actually 78.4mm) ...that should do the job.