planemos;1838733 said:Thinking back. I figured out my mistake and why the head warped. Hopefully I can save other first timers from making this mistake.
When I went to pull of my head I had taken off all that I could think of and see which needed to be taken of in order to free it. I hooked up my engine hoist to the front hook on the intake mani side. I hooked up the other end to the back hook on the exhaust side. And I began to lift with the hoist. But, here is the mistake, the exhaust manifold support was still connected. I believe it bolts to the side of the block and under the turbo or turbo flange or whatever. So it us under there and hard to acually see if you don't look hard enough. So I lifted the hoist so much that the front suspension on my car was raising up. And that action right there is what made my head warp. It makes sense because the oil is leaking from under the front hook. I was tired and in a rush to get to a drift event. Big mistake. But now I have a solid plan thanks to this thread. I'm taking off the head. I can reuse the headbolts. Might even be able to reuse the headgasket. I will look for a new head or get this one machined. Actually it would need to be heated and bent back. I'm undecided if that is the best idea or if a machine shop can do such a thing. I'm finally back on track. I was at a loss there for a while.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. STOP.
How on Earth could you know the head is in any way "warped"? Answer: "You can't". It *might* be, but you have no idea if it is or isn't.
You're making this MUCH more complicated than it likely is. You NEEEEEEEEEEEEEED to machine the head surface for it to seal. IT WILL NOT SEAL if you simply take it off, clean it by hand and put it back on with a new gasket. That was your BIGGEST problem with your rebuild. THATS IT. Very simple.
Goddamn, I swear half the time it's like I'm talking to myself around here.... :nono:
Furthermore (not as if you care what some Mech E has to say who's rebuilt a handful of these engines and been SUCCESSFUL every time...), but you may want to reconsider your platform if you want to drift a car without deep pockets. If you can't afford to simply pull the head and do this simple repair right, you're going to have a long, difficult and painful road ahead in trying to drift a mk3 and keep it running. I'm really not trying to be a dick so I hope it's not coming off that way, but I'm trying to help you out.