<VV> Head Work
Chris & Bill Strickland
lechevrier at earthlink.net
Sat Aug 15 19:40:00 EDT 2009
>1) What is the standard procedure for removing valve seats?
>
call it a 140 and follow what Seth said, or did you mean guides? For
seat work you send your head to a qualified and recommended Corvair or
Porsche specialist if you want to be sure the job is done right
>2) ... heating the heads to 425-450F ... is one way ...
>
Back when Corvairs were a dime a dozen, nobody thought twice about using
a valve guide driving tool and pounding them out cold -- since I have
done this rather often, it still doesn't occur to me that there may be
another way, but that might be different, now that I have an oven in the
shop for doing this sort of thing. Not sure how that heating thing
might affect future valve seat retention -- 450 would be pretty warm on
an operating engine, and are we "sure" of the oven temp readings? You
have a calibrated infrared gauge?
check out your replacement guide to see which way you would install it,
and take the old one out backwards. make sure the part going through
the head is clean, first. Probably, therefore, you'd do exhausts from
the combustion chamber side.
More importantly, after they are installed, you ream them to correct
size, ie, to fit your valves -- a better choice is to have them honed.
I prefer brass guides in Corvairs, or bronze.
One, yeah, I'd do it cold, but really it is no big deal to disassemble
the head when it's on the bench -- a hammer and socket will take care of
the keepers and then it is apart -- five minutes work at the most.
Installation goes slower - you can rent a valve spring compressor if you
don't have one, or borrow it from your neighbor, but once you have it
apart, it sure gets tempting to do a valve job or at least relap the
valve faces, which you should do anyway on the one with the new guide.
Then there is the question of why only one guide? are you sure it is the
only one that needs replacement? What is so special about that one that
the others in that head (or the other side of the engine) didn't see?
Stuck valve do to gum deposits? I'd be checking the rest of them, too.
One does not want to repeat the head R&R unnecessarily ...
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