Good evening guys. I am having a real hard time removing all the gasket material on my head. When I think I have it all removed by using gasket remover and scraper, I let it sit, which then lets it dry completely and I see there is more material left and not a smooth surface. I have gone through 1 and a half spray cans of the gasket remover product.
So Im thinking of getting head faced but unsure how many times the head has already been faced. Is there a spec as to how shallow the bowl can get? I measure the depth at .460" currently.
Brad
Hi Brian. Those rust areas seems to be where the gasket remains. The other areas(where the dotted areas are) are the amooth areas but look like the gasket surface.
I would feel better if I could just resurface it without any issues. Unsure what original head thickness was and what the min thickness allowance is.
Brad
As I said above, Part 2 / Par 4 of that link restates what I said, Over shaving of the head can result in too high a compression and valve interference. Also the info posted there is only what they assume to be original approximate factory head thickness as we do not have any factory published data available. I can hardly imagine that removing nearly a 1/4" from a 1/2" head could be considered an option. Also the head helps remove heat from the engine so the more meat you remove from the head the faster it will get hot and the less heat it will wick away from the engine.
My advice remains the same, take the head to your auto machinist and see what they have to say.
Took me a while to track this down... lol- work gets in the way:
The standard 6.48:1 head dome volume was about 90.5 cc. It’s important to know if your head has already been milled (for reasons I outline later) before you have it milled. You can tell by measuring the thickness of the head from the mating surface to one of the machined head stud bosses on the corner of the head. A standard head will be around 2.1406 inches (plus or minus a few thousanths). If you want to go for the 7:1, then you want the total thickness of the head to be around 2.109 in., which should not be exceeded unless you know what you are doing. (Jim Allen)
The quote above pulled from the links below, and the 2A page link has interesting photos comparing a 6.48 head with a supersonic head and an industrial low compression head.