Don,,
Old Johnny pops use lead washers under the nuts of their head studs, valve cover studs, etc…
I think they’re still available. Most of them are too large for sohc. I’ve used the 3/8 size for troublesome bolt/studs.
Never used them on a sohc, but they work well with machine washer nuts in other applications.
We’ve already talked toe to toe about BBC and SBC head studs. I put ‘em all in using the Smokey Yunick method.
It insures they pull up perpendicular allow the nuts to set flat on the head. Prevents any angled or loaded studs due to thread hole drilling errors.
Picture of the two ends..?
The Eunice is good advice almost 60 years later. I'd add measure the stud protrusion and make sure there are a couple of threads showing after tightening the nuts. The studs don't have to bottom....using Loctite will secure them. There is a whole thing on studs not being torqued into their threaded holes and distorted the hole threads.
A true disciple of the Legend. 😇. Remembering now the same, even have all his books. Somewhere…
His quotes:
“If you’re not Winning, you’re not cheating enough”.
“12.5:1 compression is ideal and she’ll live to the end of the race. But if you don’t go 14:1 + or as much as you can get, some else will and you will lose”.
Exactly, while the loctite is still wet, place the barrels, head on. Run all the nuts down really snug. Due to the thread stud clearances, this allows the studs to pull straight up aligning the studs in slightly angled threaded holes. While wet the loctite flows to fill the irregularities in the thread bolt clearances. Wait 24 hrs remove nuts and build her..To understand this better, screw a bolt into a threaded hole loosely. See how far you can move it side to side.
He wrote and we’ve tried this on bbc blower motors and SBCs Nats… Use his stud installation technique, Install same type of head gasket you’re planning on running, torque, torque plate to your preferred cylinder head torque. Pump hot water through block at the temperature you’re planning on running. Let cool, retorque torque plates. Pump hot water through at desired temp. Finish hone cylinders. The top inch or more of Chevy’s cylinders are pulled in a thousand or more around each stud by this torque deflecting the OEM deck. Effectively reducing the diameter and destroying the perfect round cylinder at the most important top of stroke. Installing and torquing the torque plates simulates this hexagonal shape distortion. Allowing the final hone to effectively remove any distortion created by the torquing process and different deck loadings of different types of head gaskets. Thicker decks reduce this..
Writing further. Tightening or loosening any one cylinder head nut or bolt will increase leak down on an assembled engine.
Smokey ran really small ends gaps. Experimented till they butted. He claimed he didn’t like sweeping the street with blow by.
However with a 33+psi belt driven mooneyham air cleaner, you’re still going to see some blow by. Even with less than 1% leak down on an old school 496 BBC, You won’t see it blowing leaves off the street. But you will see it. More of it the better it runs.
Let’s not discuss the SmokeRam….😁