Heads can lift slightly even with the stock charger with big tuning (32# boost). Not so much to blow the gasket out, but enough to let some coolant into the cylinder. There was evidence of that when I rebuilt my engine.
Heads can lift slightly even with the stock charger with big tuning (32# boost). Not so much to blow the gasket out, but enough to let some coolant into the cylinder. There was evidence of that when I rebuilt my engine.
Heads can lift slightly even with the stock charger with big tuning (32# boost). Not so much to blow the gasket out, but enough to let some coolant into the cylinder. There was evidence of that when I rebuilt my engine.
I saw the same thing when we tore mine down Tom. It had some rust on the deck between 5 & 7 . Coolant would magically disappear every couple months after the 4094 and nozzles too. Never went over 40 psi.
If i could buy them for $400 i could mark them up, resell them and still come in under my cost now lol. hook us up with your source,,,:thumb:
More so you could sell them to whole sellers by way of a drop shipment never even touch them in quantity just some paper work and make a ton of money at $400 !!! ME TOO on the source! :thumb:
Prolly stupid but I'm guessing over tightening of the stock bolts won't get you any more "clamp" than stock spec? The Dodge guys do it with success but I don't know if we could?
No. They are torque-to-yeild. The yeild strength of the bolt is engineered to be the specific clamping force the engine designers figured would be required. That is why they are tightened as a torque plus aditional degrees. Speeds up the assembly line process...
so how is it the cummins guys are getting away with more torque on their TTY bolts and holding headgaskets together better than at the factory torque?