Ok ok. You guys have convinced me - this heat-shrink idea ain’t gonna work. Fine :-)
It was mainly the rubber on these manifolds that showed some signs of cracking that I thought I’d address. And maybe they’re not that bad after all? I mean, this would probably be the worst of the four:
![](https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20171223/9e8b4ad7f6c7e8113c74e89bbf179ed0.jpg)
Notice the crack in the rubber at the flange. All the others have the rubber around the edges of the flange flaking off (mostly at the screw areas). Taking a closer look inside these manifolds I see that the aluminum part rises up about another 1/4” above the flange surface so I’m probably safe on the rubbers as long as these cracks don’t break through the inside surface (if that makes any sense?), right?
![](https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20171223/45402064ec556fe1451ac5209740aea7.jpg)
What do you guys think? Have you seen worse? Think these might still be usable? One way to find out? Don’t bother?
Unfortunately I don’t have an impact bit version of JIS and ended up mangling the heads - these suckers were seized. So I had to try and extract some of these mounting screws with my hammering impact driver (which by the way wasn’t easy hammering through the frame triangle) and then to my Grabit Pro bits, and both were unsuccessful. So then I managed to get my bull-nosed Vise-Grips and with some generous application of PB Blaster around the heads I was finally able to set them free.
I’m gonna replace these JIS screws with stainless steel socket heads and will be applying some zinc anti-seize to the threads as I’ve learned is the thing to do to minimize galling...
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