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Cylinder head torque
- Thread starter barks944
- Start date
TTM
Well-known member
For what it's worth Sly has used a metal headgasket on his rebuild and torqued the head the same. It hasn't been leaking (...yet!).
The first, and earlier approach, for a Turbo is to tighten to 14 ft/lbs, then 36 ft/lbs and finally 65 ft/lbs with lightly oiled threads on the studs.
The updated approach, for M44.51/52 engines is to tighten to 15 ft/lbs, then tighten by 90 degrees and finally tighten by another 90 degrees.
Mike
White 2.7 automatic
bmnelsc
New member
robwright
New member
I think this is largely affected by the amount of sustained boost you're running and quite probably the condition of your headstuds. Depending on how many times they've been re torqued could easily stretch them which under higher boost levels can lead to headlift. When this happens the cylinders vibrate just enough to create an abrasive action and it 'rubs' the headgasket away so that you lose the seal....well this is our diagnosis.ORIGINAL: barks944
Wow, head gaskets get munched up pretty quick on track then! Thats a cometic metal too? How long would a factory gasket last?!
Yes, Chris, you're quite correct. Should have been ft-lbs.
ORIGINAL: barks944
It will be running my rebuilt K26/6 and about 1 Bar.
You know you don't want to do that.....[8|]
TTM
Well-known member
ORIGINAL: GPF
You know you don't want to do that.....[8|]
Why not... there are some who are running a standard exhaust with a 3.0 engine... (running for cover...)
bmnelsc
New member
ORIGINAL: robwright
You can use the dials to gauge an amount of degrees after initial torque but in my experience, which totals to about 20 years when talking about another 90 degrees it is just as good to do it by eye. Torque is actually quite a subjective thing. One man's torque can be different to another's even with the same setting on the wrench. The best way to do it as has been standard practice on the railway for some years is to set your wrench by a torque tester. To me me this is overkill and a sign of the blame culture that we live in. I have seen some examples in some workshops of having to fill out a register after having used the torque tester.
I believe you are referring to technique here - steady pull on the wrench vs sharp tug? I've seen differences with those approaches. I'm assuming the only way you get a "correct" degree of torque value is a steady pull from the starting point until the required degrees are reached. Assuming a 90 degree requirement - it doesn't seem correct to me to go to 8o degrees and then go another 10 as you are not really stretching the bolt the same way?
robwright
New member
ORIGINAL: bmnelsc
I believe you are referring to technique here - steady pull on the wrench vs sharp tug? I've seen differences with those approaches. I'm assuming the only way you get a "correct" degree of torque value is a steady pull from the starting point until the required degrees are reached. Assuming a 90 degree requirement - it doesn't seem correct to me to go to 8o degrees and then go another 10 as you are not really stretching the bolt the same way?
I agree. Another thing that gets me is when I here my fitters torquing things up and you here click, click, click on the same bloody fastener!!! Once is enough!!! It is correct the first time [

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