IJ.;1087732 said:
Keep it out of detonation and it won't fail.
I used to run 30Psi on my old tt 3.4L Toyota V8 in the 240z and never suffered a failure as it NEVER skirted detonation.
Tune on the ragged edge and you're asking for trouble on any gasket as the stronger the HG means you're just moving the point of failure to the next weakest point (ringlands in this case)
This. I ran 15PSI on a 60-1 (as did the previous owner, he did a few bursts of 17PSI as well from what I understand) and boosted quite a lot (again, as did the PO) and the HG looked perfect when I took it off, no signs of it starting to give anywhere. Mk3Brent ran 20+ PSI on some serious turbos for a long time on a stock HG, and his only ended up failing because of detonation. I know there are others making good power on relatively high boost with no issues on composite head gaskets, and they're doing just fine because they're
staying out of detonation. Personally, I'd rather BHG than break a ring land (having just finished repairing both (not really a blow HG, just had a serious problem and I was nervous about it so I replaced the HG before the motor went back in).
Another interesting bit, not DIRECTLY related but of the same concept. I know several domestic guys spraying pretty big shots of nitrous on composites (they all swear by Fel-Pros too). Some of them have even re-used Fel-Pros and been fine. I wouldn't recommend the latter at all, but it serves as an illustration, it's not the composite HG that's the problem.