The noise as you describe it definately sounds like a slipped liner, but I'm surprised you don't have any other symptoms.
It's usually accompanied by a blown head gasket (or equivalent) symptoms such as:
- slow loss of coolant over time,
- a pressurised cooling system well after the engine has cooled down,
- rough running on startup in the morning or after a long period of being switched off
- by the tiome it starts running rough in the moringins, you should be able to pick which cylinder it is by looking at the sparkplugs / cylinder top through the spark plug hole. The slipped liner ones should be much cleaner than the rest. Maybe you've detected it at the onset of the problem.
I haven't heard of pinning the liners and would be keen to know more if you go ahead (price, effectiveness etc).
First of all however, I would wait for at least some other symptoms to develop to confirm the diagnosis. While waiting, I'd also install an engine temperature monitoring system (something like engine watchdog TM2 or similar) to make sure you don't accidentally cook the engine and do further damage if symptoms do develop.
If you have a slipped liner though, it often means its been overheated and the alloy block has softened, which makes the rest of your liners susceptable to slipping as well. You should get the workshop to hardness test your block.
If it has softened, the fix I thought usually involves block hardening and relining the cylinders. - This is costly, but if you do go down this route, I'd recommend getting top hat liners put in - it prevents them slipping in the future.
Good luck with it.


				
				
				
					
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