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Cylinder Head

PostPosted: Tue Jul 26, 2016 2:43 pm
by Type28
Hi folks

I wonder if I could ask the opinions of people more learned than myself on the viability of the head in the pictures below.
It would appear to have been skimmed below the recommended level that I have read from previous posts on the site, although I recall one post that said they had seen heads so far skimmed the lettering was missing on the underside.
There is some damage around number one cylinder face and there is a helicoil in number two exhaust stud.
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Re: Cylinder Head

PostPosted: Wed Jul 27, 2016 2:07 am
by Panda
Head thickness is ok at present, but the corrosion near the fire ring may be a problem, possibly requiring excessive machining to clean up. Hard to tell from the picture, may need some welding first. Then checking hardness.......
Alan P.

Re: Cylinder Head

PostPosted: Wed Jul 27, 2016 10:04 am
by rgh0
Yes the head thickness is fine and can go a lot less if needed. If it needs a big skim to get a clean face and remove the small areas of corrosion I would look at welding up the corroded areas and skimming it less to increase its future life. However I would first check the heads hardness before I did anything to ensure its not to soft as this is the real reason why heads mainly need to be scrapped these days. I would also pressure test it to identify any cracks that may require welding as some cracks in some areas can be very hard and expensive to repair. With new replacement heads available these days it becomes an economic question of how much do you spend retrieving an old head versus just buying a new head.

As heads get thinner the challenge is all the other subtle changes you need to make to the valve gear and head hemispherical chamber setup to compensate for the reduced thickness. So you need to know what your doing when building up thinner heads.

None of the damage looks unacceptable from the photos. The dings in the cylinder head squish area are a relatively common issue and just need cleaning up to remove any sharp edges that can create hot spots. Helicoils are not an issue assuming they have been installed correctly

cheers
Rohan

Re: Cylinder Head

PostPosted: Wed Jul 27, 2016 11:19 am
by Type28
Thanks for your replies, I think I will get the hardness tested and pressure tested.

As a matter of interest, as I have heard the term used a lot on the forum, how is a hardness test undertaken?

Cheers
George

Re: Cylinder Head

PostPosted: Wed Jul 27, 2016 11:29 am
by rgh0
These days you use a hardness testing device to bounce a small hard steel ball point off the surface. The amount of rebound measured electronically is proportional to the hardness. For aluminum heads it is measured in Brinell hardness scale and ideally you want something over 50 down to 40 you can live with under forty and you have trouble keeping the head gaskets to seal and the head bolts will start sinking into the head. Modern new castings are typically in the 80 plus range.

Originally it was measure by driving a ball point of hardened steel into the head with a known force and measuring the size of the hole created

cheers
Rohan

Re: Cylinder Head

PostPosted: Wed Jul 27, 2016 3:13 pm
by Type28
Thanks Rohan for the explanation - I?ve learnt something new today :D .
Cheers
George

Re: Cylinder Head

PostPosted: Wed Jul 27, 2016 3:32 pm
by dlbutler
The third photo showing one combustion chamber looks like a piece of piston or piston ring was pushed into the head. One of the reasons that can happen is the distributor advance springs become weak and the distributor goes full advance at a low rpm causing detonation. The detonation breaks the top compression ring which eventually cuts its way out and into the cylinder. So, it would be a good idea to have the distributor checked on a distributor test machine to make sure it has the book correct advance curve.

Re: Cylinder Head

PostPosted: Thu Jul 28, 2016 9:54 am
by Type28
Thanks for the reply,

Not sure what caused the damage- the head is a spare one I acquired and wondered if it was worth while holding onto.

Cheers
George

Re: Cylinder Head

PostPosted: Thu Jul 28, 2016 11:04 am
by dlbutler
Corrosion does not produce sharp 90 degree corners on any "depressions" in a cylinder head. Clean up any burs, but don't try to make them disappear by cutting the head more.