suprakid3;1278538 said:it isnt leaking its just a precaution so it dont blow on me
7mgte1988;1278641 said:A blown headgasket can sneek up on u. u should check the radiator for carbon monoxide or drive till u lose coolant frequently or bust your hoses then when it gets bad u can only drive for like 30 to 45min.
Dont ask how i know took me a year to fix
suprakid3;1278538 said:it isnt leaking its just a precaution so it dont blow on me
7mgte1988 said:A blown headgasket can sneek up on u....
dumbo;1278003 said:There is this, but I didn't write it of course, and of course am not responsible for your engine.
http://cygnusx1.net/supra/TechTips/head_retorque.aspx
figgie;1279312 said:Again, magic does not exist in the universe. blow headgasket are like everything else, CAUSE/EFFECT relation.
tErbo b00st;1279461 said:and one of the causes can be shitty torque specs from the factory and general beating your stock/mildly modded engine
you should probably come with some better information next time :nono:
figgie;1279489 said:Bolt stretching has nothing to do with BHG as that is caused by.... get ready for this
DETONATION.
That is right, the bolt's torque value has a correlation with BHG as the sun coming up each morning has a correlation with the GDP of the United States. incase you don't get it. There is no correlation.
56 lbs/ft is plenty for the OEM value. Start dicking around with the engine and the issue is not the torque value (as it never was), it is with such brilliant owners such as yourself thinking that removing the EGR system is a "good" idea for performance when the EGR system has no inherit detractions in overall performance
tErbo b00st;1279503 said:just because I don't post on here regulary does not mean that I am new to internal combustion engines you fuck
tErbo b00st;1279503 said:Yes, detonation can cause a bhg. So can too much boost coupled with too high compression ratio.
Improperly torqued studs can also cause this situation. Whether it is not following the torqueing sequence or too low of torque, this can cause and WILL cause a bhg.
Shitty studs can cause this too...which directly corrolates to stud stretching. Get better studs, get less stretch, get more head gasket life.
Just because your tunes are shit and you experience detonation, doesn't mean that's the only thing that can cause a bhg
k thx bi
fyi, if your greatest claim to faim is dispelling the egr myth...you need to learn more
figgie;1279489 said:OOoooohhhhhhhh.....
lookkkkyyyyy what we have-y here... Ohhh shit, we are gonna work hard today!!
Now on to you.
Seeing as your are new here. Time for this post to be an education lesson and what facts are and what bullshit that was propagated by the internet is.
That rhetoric you posted, is nothing more that bullshit propagated by the internet.
Bolt stretching has nothing to do with BHG as that is caused by.... get ready for this
DETONATION.
That is right, the bolt's torque value has a correlation with BHG as the sun coming up each morning has a correlation with the GDP of the United States. incase you don't get it. There is no correlation.
56 lbs/ft is plenty for the OEM value. Start dicking around with the engine and the issue is not the torque value (as it never was), it is with such brilliant owners such as yourself thinking that removing the EGR system is a "good" idea for performance when the EGR system has no inherit detractions in overall performance
Read my signature, learn from it, next time, try to bring a bigger gun to the party.
Welcome to Supramania.
figgie;1279517 said:You could have fooled me with the nonesense you posted, twice now.
the ignorance is strong with you, younglin. So is the lack of English fundamentals!
I honestly don't care if you are Dr. Robert Bosch himself. If you come in here spouting bullshit like you are currently doing. Be prepared to get curbed stomp by yours truely.
I do not take kindly to arrogance but one pet peeve of mine is, blantant ignorance as you are showing. Throw in a dash of mis-spelling FAME for faim... and you have a very long climb up a very slippery slope.
On to your improperly torqued bolts crap.
If you assumption is in fact correct. Then EVERY SINGLE ENGINE (yes not even specific to toyota but every single engine) that is not torquing the bolts to thier yield rating WILL suffer BHG. Of course we know better as even with the stock values, 7m's (both N/A and Turbo) with OEM HG have lasted 225k miles without EVER being opened. That means the head never ever coming off for anything to include the crap which you believe is tied to the torque yield that Toyota did use and that is, blown head gasket. So that alone makes your assertation, plain and complete CRAP.
As for my claim to "faim", I have more than EGR under my belt. I usually start with correct useage of the english language. Then, proper sentence structure. Throw in some physics, blend together and TADA....
you have me.
tErbo b00st;1279528 said:Well thank you for backing up your knowledge of engines by nitpicking my english (which really isn't too bad).
I'm an engineer, not an english major
figgie;1279531 said:If you are infact an Engineer, then English was one of the requirements for your curriculum as you need to convey your engineering diagrams/designs, in ENGLISH, to the project sponsors, be it internal or external. All those physics calculation mean nothing to management, they want to know if it will fail/standup to x hours at y stress, what the FEA says etc, and you will not be doing that in Engineering terms.
But since you did bring it up, what field of Engineering?
tErbo b00st;1279536 said:just because there is a problem does not mean that EVERY single engine will have that same problem. Varying manufacturing tolerances, driving style, engine mainteance, and modifcations will change the outcome. As we all know, just because a recall is issued on a car, does not mean ALL of the cars will encounter this problem. Only many of them. I can't believe you are willing to make the assumption that because some cars have, that means all cars will.
tErbo b00st;1279536 said:HG bolts are not suppose to be torqued to their yeild. If you knew anything about material properties and fatigue crack propogation, in tandem with cycling cylinder pressures, you would know this. If you tighten something to it's yield torque that means as soon as any pressure is exerted on it, it will experience plastic deformation. This is bad if you weren't sure. Deformation coupled with cyclic fatigue is also bad.