Off with her head!
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- Minor Legend
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No, it's definitely Moorespeed. The chap I dealt with is called Ian. Apparently he used to have a Minor with a highly tuned 1098 engine.


Alex Holden - http://www.alexholden.net/
If it doesn't work, you're not hitting it with a big enough hammer.
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- Minor Legend
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I think it's cured. I ran it for 20 minutes at 2000RPM with no obvious signs of leakage. Unfortunately because I changed several variables at once I can't say for sure which one(s) were significant:
* I had the head skimmed. The guy who did it said it wasn't flat before, and the surface finish was quite rough.
* I replaced the studs, then I trial-fitted the head with no gasket and checked there was thread still showing so the nuts definitely weren't going to bottom out.
* I used a Payen head gasket. As well as the previously mentioned lacquer coating on both sides, it appeared to squish down a bit more than the standard gasket.
* I greased the surface of the head and block.
* I oiled the threads on the studs.
* I torqued the nuts down to 44 lb/ft instead of 40.
After a good clean to get rid of the grinding dust (don't tell my mum but I stuck it through a dishwasher cycle
) I had a close look for evidence of the hardened exhaust seat inserts and I think I found it. The transition from one to the other is nearly invisible - there's no step on the combustion chamber side because the face has been recut after insertion. I still think the exhaust valves must be the standard sort because of the pitting (in hindsight I should have ordered a set of the unleaded type at the same time as the head gasket and studs).
* I had the head skimmed. The guy who did it said it wasn't flat before, and the surface finish was quite rough.
* I replaced the studs, then I trial-fitted the head with no gasket and checked there was thread still showing so the nuts definitely weren't going to bottom out.
* I used a Payen head gasket. As well as the previously mentioned lacquer coating on both sides, it appeared to squish down a bit more than the standard gasket.
* I greased the surface of the head and block.
* I oiled the threads on the studs.
* I torqued the nuts down to 44 lb/ft instead of 40.
After a good clean to get rid of the grinding dust (don't tell my mum but I stuck it through a dishwasher cycle



Alex Holden - http://www.alexholden.net/
If it doesn't work, you're not hitting it with a big enough hammer.
Dunno really - maybe lets the gasket ease into place a little better - and seems to stop it sticking to the head/block so easy to come off. It's just the way I was told many many moons ago - I've always done it - and only ever had one blown head gasket - the day after MOT garage boiled my engine almost dry! It had no cooling fan and they left it idling for 3/4 hour during the whole test.



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- Minor Legend
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With the older paper and asbestos gaskets the grease used to soak into the gasket. Back in the 70's I was told by numerous mechanics to use grease when replaceing a head gasket.aupickup wrote:what happens to the gtrease when it gets hot
These days my gut feeling is no grease, especially with the Payen gasket, as there is no where for the grease to go, other than to burn into a sticky mess between the metal gasket face and the head/block.
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- Minor Legend
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Well it was certainly very clean every time I assembled it. I suspect the two failures were mainly down to the head being out of true (badly skimmed in the past).


Alex Holden - http://www.alexholden.net/
If it doesn't work, you're not hitting it with a big enough hammer.
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Seems strange that it had not been ground in the first place but stil at least its now solved the problem and 8 thou is quite a bit out for a head.It now has a nice ground surface finish with some very slight pitting around the water galleries rather than the deep flycutter marks it had before.
Cheers
Kevin
Lovejoy 1968 Smoke Grey Traveller (gone to a new home after13 years)
Herts Branch Member
Moderator MMOC 44706
Kevin
Lovejoy 1968 Smoke Grey Traveller (gone to a new home after13 years)
Herts Branch Member
Moderator MMOC 44706