
Looks great!
I wil be at my shop tomorrow of you wanna swing by. I am leaving early afternoon though, back again Sunday mid day.....
Cannot wait to do some flowbench work

( I have your video at the shop too)
timmmy wrote:Plasma makes light work of this sort of fab eh Mark
Looks great!
I wil be at my shop tomorrow of you wanna swing by. I am leaving early afternoon though, back again Sunday mid day.....
Cannot wait to do some flowbench work
( I have your video at the shop too)



yodasfro wrote:I think you need 4kq flanges as they use smaller CV bolts like stock CQ axles do.
a4kquattro wrote:Just got back from the machine shop, will need to work with Haydn this week to come up with some cad for some tooling that will be needed to get the heads bolted on to the flow bench.
the machine:
the plastic adapter that goes under the head to provide a sealing surface and a place for the head bolts to draw down on (this needs to be made):
sleeve that goes below the above plastic adapter. bore needs to be the same as the engine bore so this will need to be made as well. One option is to make a sleeve that will fit inside this piece, or it can be made one piece as well:
little adapter to push down on the valve assembly. Basically the stock valves need to be fitted to the head with the factory retaining hardware but very weak springs so they can be easily depressed with the tooling. This adapter provides a place for the dial indicator to press against to provide the correct amount of lift for the given test.
this is the adapter bar that the dial indicator mounts to. this pretty much bolts up to the head, although I will need to pull two of the valve cover studs and install some slightly longer pieces:
quattrofrog wrote:I see... so if I wrap my gearbox in a tarp and bury it in the snow..... then it will stay fresh forever! Good work Marc!
