I see the 250 guides are shorter than the 305 I have on my desk. ................lm
G-Man wrote:They were very loose on the new valves I put in.
G
LOUD MOUSE wrote:OK.
What was wrong with the guides?. ..............lm
G-Man wrote:I use a butane gas torch to heat up the head.
G
LOUD MOUSE wrote:What caused the HEAT RING?. ................lm
G-Man wrote:Dick
Yes - I guess that the earlier valves would have been all stainless. Not so good as a bearing material in the guide but better for the head in contact with hot gases.
I understand your feelings fro driving out the guides but the aluminum will expand more than the cast iron guide so will release the interference a little.
Here is a picture of the tool I made to knock my guides out and the guides themselves.
G
Dick Eastman wrote:Thanks, Graham.G-Man wrote:Dick
I got my head cleaned up first and then pushed the guides out from the inside. Pretty difficult to get those circlips off when they are still in the head.
As for the valve, I would think it was a cost-saving measure. Austenitic stainless for the head and a cheaper alternative for the stem. Probably friction-welded together.
G
From stated above, the earlier exhaust valves were entirely stainless?
As for the guides, I noticed I could get some movement on one of the guides when I had heated the head up to remove the cams, but my objective at the time was cam removal, not guides. BTW, the cams came out very easily after heating the head in the oven @ 250 deg for about 45 minutes - I do not like driving parts out of interference fits. I did mic the cam bearings, and set a bore gage to that diameter, and measured the cam bearing bores: they were .0003" larger than the bearings. Honda cast a clearance at the 12 o'clock position in the cam bearing bores, and I would presume that when the head is torqued down, the bearing bores close minutely to lock the bearings down.
I'm going to turn up a piloted driver for the guides [7mm pilot], and warm the head up again, and try removal. I do have some pitting on the combustion side of the guides, and my primary concern is scoring the guide bores - I'll have to go gingerly to avoid that.