JoeFin
Well-known member
After years of doing this on my own cars, friends Hot Rods and still others by word of mouth. I’ve gotten to the point where I hate to see guys building engines and Not doing it. As any good Chevy SB builder will tell you its all in the heads.
Now before all the “Nay-Sayers” chime in with the “You’ll never pass smog again” or the “You’re ruining a perfectly good engine”, I’ll just say I’ve been doing this for over 10 years now, I’ve never had 1 of my jobs NOT pass Calif. Smog - years down the road (have the smog certs to prove it) and No I don’t lose all my low end torque or even an amount to effect the drivability of the car at low speeds/RPM
I do however gain 10-15% better gas milage (Freeway Driving) and lots of top end power, from just polishing the runners. In fact in 1 of my daily drivers (1993 Ford Excort with 1.9 lt eng.) where before I had to turn off the air conditioning and mash the peddle to the floor to try and maintain 70 mph climbing a steep hill before polishing, I was able to drive 75 mph, air conditioner on and some peddle left.
Furthermore – if you are worried about the engine’s ability to atomize fuel, given that just about every engine out there has EFI, I would be looking at my fuel injectors instead.
With that being said – here is an R22 head from friend building up an old Toyota 4WD for a rock crawler the way he brought in to me, with valves removed.
Same head, Decked .030” on a surface grinder and with the runners and bowls partially cleaned up.
Now it helps a lot I have a Valve and Seat machine because I wouldn’t want to be stuffing Cross-Buffs on a die grinder through valve seats I was going to use. But that doesn’t prevent the guy without them from first cleaning and polishing his chambers and runners prior to sending the head in to be surfaced with a fresh Triple Cut Seat Grinding and Valves Ground.
Personally it has gotten tough to find a shop that does good precision head work. Our disposable society has just about run them all out of business. The last set of heads I sent it (in 1993 - a 462 cu. in. Ford M Block) came back with seat heights varying .070" or better
And once again once those valves are back in the seat the customer isn't going to see what they have done. Personally I like to inspect the valves under a 30x tool scope to see how the grinder is cutting the face. With all the newer materials used to build valves you have to be careful to select the right stone.
This is a valve before lapping
Oh well that's my 2 cents
Peace out Hot Rodders
Now before all the “Nay-Sayers” chime in with the “You’ll never pass smog again” or the “You’re ruining a perfectly good engine”, I’ll just say I’ve been doing this for over 10 years now, I’ve never had 1 of my jobs NOT pass Calif. Smog - years down the road (have the smog certs to prove it) and No I don’t lose all my low end torque or even an amount to effect the drivability of the car at low speeds/RPM
I do however gain 10-15% better gas milage (Freeway Driving) and lots of top end power, from just polishing the runners. In fact in 1 of my daily drivers (1993 Ford Excort with 1.9 lt eng.) where before I had to turn off the air conditioning and mash the peddle to the floor to try and maintain 70 mph climbing a steep hill before polishing, I was able to drive 75 mph, air conditioner on and some peddle left.
Furthermore – if you are worried about the engine’s ability to atomize fuel, given that just about every engine out there has EFI, I would be looking at my fuel injectors instead.
With that being said – here is an R22 head from friend building up an old Toyota 4WD for a rock crawler the way he brought in to me, with valves removed.
Same head, Decked .030” on a surface grinder and with the runners and bowls partially cleaned up.
Now it helps a lot I have a Valve and Seat machine because I wouldn’t want to be stuffing Cross-Buffs on a die grinder through valve seats I was going to use. But that doesn’t prevent the guy without them from first cleaning and polishing his chambers and runners prior to sending the head in to be surfaced with a fresh Triple Cut Seat Grinding and Valves Ground.
Personally it has gotten tough to find a shop that does good precision head work. Our disposable society has just about run them all out of business. The last set of heads I sent it (in 1993 - a 462 cu. in. Ford M Block) came back with seat heights varying .070" or better
And once again once those valves are back in the seat the customer isn't going to see what they have done. Personally I like to inspect the valves under a 30x tool scope to see how the grinder is cutting the face. With all the newer materials used to build valves you have to be careful to select the right stone.
This is a valve before lapping
Oh well that's my 2 cents
Peace out Hot Rodders
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