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Old 06-22-2019, 01:52 AM
Dragncar Dragncar is offline
Ultimate Warrior
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Humbolt County California
Posts: 8,380
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mgarblik View Post
The block is important certainly, but don't forget the head bolted down to it. Case in point: Our very tall and stiff billet head has survived at 3000+ HP on both aluminum and iron IA II's for 8 years on one pair of head gaskets. No compression leak witness marks. That's with the stock 10 head bolt layout that everyone said could never be done. Clamp load is what it's all about. 9/16" studs torqued to 135 PSI. A solid head with lots of meat around every head bolt column. Use a light, flimsy aluminum head on an iron block with long, wimpy 1/2" studs at 95 ft. lbs and all you get is 10 pulled-up areas around each head stud and leaks all around, especially where the heat concentration is in the paired exhaust ports. Above 1000 HP, your asking allot of the head gasket IMO. Bore spacing doesn't help, but I am not convinced 4.840, or even 5.00" alone is an instant cure.
One pair of head gaskets for 8 years, on and off with that kind of power. Thats interesting.
Your 9/16 studs at 135lbs. They don't pull up the deck in spots. Just because your head is so solid and stiff?
The separate exhaust has got to help a bunch too.