Inlet Manifold/Valley Gasket
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Inlet Manifold/Valley Gasket
The standard inlet port sizes for the rover heads are approx 38mm. 23mm.
My Buick 300 Alloy heads have ports of 44mm x 26mm. as standard and I'm wondering what is done to seal the manifold to heads with the larger ports such as with stage 3/4 heads.
Anyone know the aperture sizes in the standard composite valley gasket, or have one to hand that they could accurately measure?
Kevin
My Buick 300 Alloy heads have ports of 44mm x 26mm. as standard and I'm wondering what is done to seal the manifold to heads with the larger ports such as with stage 3/4 heads.
Anyone know the aperture sizes in the standard composite valley gasket, or have one to hand that they could accurately measure?
Kevin
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Marki,
Sorry i might be being thick, but didn't understand your response. I don't have a gasket to hand at the moment which is why I was looking for the standard aperture sizes to see if they can be made to match the head port sizes and still leave enough material for sealing. Or do the specialists supply gaskets to match their stage 4 heads?
Kevin.
Sorry i might be being thick, but didn't understand your response. I don't have a gasket to hand at the moment which is why I was looking for the standard aperture sizes to see if they can be made to match the head port sizes and still leave enough material for sealing. Or do the specialists supply gaskets to match their stage 4 heads?
Kevin.
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What I was getting at is I have no knowledge of the 300 heads and as well as having a larger internal port they could also be larger on the outside of the port as in being offset to where standard heads are. If this was the case then you would be unlikely to be able to use a rover gasket or a stage 4 gasket if there is such a thing. I doubt they do by the way as the outside is still the same so even if larger hole wise there wouldn't be any material to seal against. If the external is the same or close to standard then a normal gasket will fit simply by opening out the holes in them.
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I've been messing about with my 3.5 lump and happened to measure the inlets the other day. I've got V8 Development stage III heads and the ports measure 45 by 27mm.
I carefully ground out the valley gasket (tin one) when I fitted the heads. I also matched the edelbrock manifold which was quite a lot of work.
You need to be very careful if the bridge between the ports has been thinned down when you fit the manifold, it is possible to have a large mis-alinement due to the sloppy fit of the manifold.
If you use the tin gasket then put a VERY thin smear of silicone round all the ports (inlet and water) on both sides of the gasket. Let the silicone cure for 1/2-1 hour before fitting the manifold.
HTH.
Pete
I carefully ground out the valley gasket (tin one) when I fitted the heads. I also matched the edelbrock manifold which was quite a lot of work.
You need to be very careful if the bridge between the ports has been thinned down when you fit the manifold, it is possible to have a large mis-alinement due to the sloppy fit of the manifold.
If you use the tin gasket then put a VERY thin smear of silicone round all the ports (inlet and water) on both sides of the gasket. Let the silicone cure for 1/2-1 hour before fitting the manifold.
HTH.
Pete
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Pete,
Thats encouraging, any idea how much gasket there was left at the top of the ports which is the critical area, Bridge area is standard, noreal need to thin it down. The gasket will need work on all the outer dimensions as will whatever manifold I decide to use
My ports are standard at the moment, about 1mm less in height than your stage 3 heads. I suppose if the gasket gets a bit thin at the top and the manifold overlaps I could squeeze in a bit of silicon in for insurance.
Kevin
Thats encouraging, any idea how much gasket there was left at the top of the ports which is the critical area, Bridge area is standard, noreal need to thin it down. The gasket will need work on all the outer dimensions as will whatever manifold I decide to use
My ports are standard at the moment, about 1mm less in height than your stage 3 heads. I suppose if the gasket gets a bit thin at the top and the manifold overlaps I could squeeze in a bit of silicon in for insurance.
Kevin
Hi Kevin,CastleMGBV8 wrote:Pete,
Thats encouraging, any idea how much gasket there was left at the top of the ports which is the critical area, Bridge area is standard, noreal need to thin it down. The gasket will need work on all the outer dimensions as will whatever manifold I decide to use
My ports are standard at the moment, about 1mm less in height than your stage 3 heads. I suppose if the gasket gets a bit thin at the top and the manifold overlaps I could squeeze in a bit of silicon in for insurance.
Kevin
There was a good 5-6mm of gasket left at the top. At the bottom it goes right round to the other set of ports!
I always use a bit of silicone as the tin valley gaskets are prone to leaking.
HTH,
Pete
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Sounds like I shouldn't have a problem then if there is 5-6mm. at the top, should only need to trim out about 3mm from the top and bottom and the sides should not be a problem.
Thanks for the info, the engine spec is gradually coming together and I'm just trying to avoid problems with the final build.
Kevin.
Thanks for the info, the engine spec is gradually coming together and I'm just trying to avoid problems with the final build.
Kevin.
I'm sure that your right!stevieturbo wrote:Black valley gaskets are much better than the old tin
its just that I've "ported" my tin one now and can't be bothered doing the whole thing again with a black one.
The other thing is I did not know whether its possible to trim the composite ones, do they have a "special" edge round the ports?
Pete
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