bulletpruf
Well-known member
Fellas - I'm building a 7.3 IDI diesel for my crew cab dually project. I'm working on the valves and valve guides and I'm getting some strange results.
I measured the valve guide ID with a split ball/small hole gauge and a mic (down to the tenth thousandth) and felt pretty good about my results - valve to valve guide clearance was right around .002" which is where I expected it to be on a low-mile engine.
However, next I measured it by installing the valve in the guide, pushing it out .400" (to simulate valve being open) and then using dial indicator on the valve to measure amount of wiggle. When I was measuring side to side (perpendicular to rocker arm) I was getting about .004" of movement, indicating .002" of clearance. However, when I moved the dial indicator parallel with the rocker arm, I got .010" of movement, for .005" clearance, which is a big difference. I realize valve guides were oblong, but I didn't expect this much of a variation.
I then switched to a snap gauge, which allows me to measure a bit more accurately than the split ball gauge because I can measure the larger axis of the valve guide as well as the narrow axis. I got measurements on the larger axis (parallel to the rocker arm) that were larger than what I got with the split ball gauge, but only by a few tenth of a hundredth thousandth (example - .3747" instead of .3743"). However, I didn't see any readings that indicated .005" of clearance like I saw with the dial indicator method.
Any ideas on what I should be using as the most accurate method?
Thanks
Scott
I measured the valve guide ID with a split ball/small hole gauge and a mic (down to the tenth thousandth) and felt pretty good about my results - valve to valve guide clearance was right around .002" which is where I expected it to be on a low-mile engine.
However, next I measured it by installing the valve in the guide, pushing it out .400" (to simulate valve being open) and then using dial indicator on the valve to measure amount of wiggle. When I was measuring side to side (perpendicular to rocker arm) I was getting about .004" of movement, indicating .002" of clearance. However, when I moved the dial indicator parallel with the rocker arm, I got .010" of movement, for .005" clearance, which is a big difference. I realize valve guides were oblong, but I didn't expect this much of a variation.
I then switched to a snap gauge, which allows me to measure a bit more accurately than the split ball gauge because I can measure the larger axis of the valve guide as well as the narrow axis. I got measurements on the larger axis (parallel to the rocker arm) that were larger than what I got with the split ball gauge, but only by a few tenth of a hundredth thousandth (example - .3747" instead of .3743"). However, I didn't see any readings that indicated .005" of clearance like I saw with the dial indicator method.
Any ideas on what I should be using as the most accurate method?
Thanks
Scott