- Joined
- Jan 18, 2011
- Messages
- 153
More work on the head.
As the thread on RH exhaust port had been stripped at some stage it was obvious that I needed to do something about it, I could go the usual way with thread inserts but decided instead to make some oversize nuts. As we all know the standard nuts are made from steel castings which when we consider the different expansion rates from the Alloy head to the steel nuts it probably is not such a good choice as the head will tend to expand away from the nuts to begin cycle of looseness and stripping.
Instead I chose Alluminium bronze alloy that has an expansion rate close to the head material and is quite tough.
I ordered a peice of hollow cast alloy bronze 3'' od x 1/2'' id x 4'' long, not cheap is all I will say about that!
First up I cleaned up the port with a 14 TPI thread scraper to remove the debris and make the threads a bit deeper with good results, then onto the lathe I turned up the blank .060'' oversize from standard. ----
Then start cutting the thread, this is a good nerve test seeing how close you can get to the shoulder without crashing the tool !
As the thread on RH exhaust port had been stripped at some stage it was obvious that I needed to do something about it, I could go the usual way with thread inserts but decided instead to make some oversize nuts. As we all know the standard nuts are made from steel castings which when we consider the different expansion rates from the Alloy head to the steel nuts it probably is not such a good choice as the head will tend to expand away from the nuts to begin cycle of looseness and stripping.
Instead I chose Alluminium bronze alloy that has an expansion rate close to the head material and is quite tough.
I ordered a peice of hollow cast alloy bronze 3'' od x 1/2'' id x 4'' long, not cheap is all I will say about that!
First up I cleaned up the port with a 14 TPI thread scraper to remove the debris and make the threads a bit deeper with good results, then onto the lathe I turned up the blank .060'' oversize from standard. ----
Then start cutting the thread, this is a good nerve test seeing how close you can get to the shoulder without crashing the tool !