Drujinin, you havn't seen my shop:eek: , just the little bit that shows around the edges in my ultra close pictures.
That's why I use ultra close pictures...
Hi Al, Always good to hear from you. Going to the Steamup in Brooks this year? If you're in the neighborhood give me a call. That offer for breakfast at the Pancake House is still open.
I said I was going to talk about valves, so here goes. As I said, I got lucky and got a good head with a recent valve job mostly intact. However, the end of #4 intake guide bushing had split off, I couldn't find a reason. There was slight water damage on one valve and it's seat, and whoever assembled it had swapped an intake valve into an exhaust port. That valve got some serious heat treating.
So we need one new guide bushing, and need to grind the seat to line up with it, not much of a grind a actually. I found a good used intake valve and had to have it surfaced. The misplaced exhaust valve went back into an exhaust port. In all, I had to grind the one "new" valve and the rusty one, and one rusty seat and the seat over the new guide. Not a bad expense.
Then, just on suspicion, I decided to lap in the valves. They seated pretty good mostly, but I found one seat that didn't line up on the valve. I had to have one more seat ground true. I also found one of the valves that had just been ground didn't touch on two oposite sides.
OK, now I am making a case for hand lapping valves. I would not have found the eccentric seat if I hadn't done it, and it was bad enough to probably cause trouble.
The water damage didn't really show up until I did the lapping; then it showed up. I had missed it.
The newly ground valve was faced in a state-of-the-art Sunnen centerless grinder and still had two flat sides, though not by much. The best grinder in the world can only line the poppet up with the stem as it finds it.
All of the seats had been left with a rather rough finish as if done with a pretty coarse stone. They looked a lot better after lapping.
I know the prevailing wisdom is that you don't have to lap if you do a fresh grind, and I've done several without lapping. This case made a believer out of me though. These large valves will run well within accepted wear limits and still have enough stem wear to cause them to run out of true in the grinder. If you lap them in you can see where they connect and have no doubts. I like no doubts.
Pic #1 The flats don't show well in the picture, but the lapping was barely touching after about five minutes grind. I did succeed in getting a good full contact without all that much lapping.
Pic #4,3 & 2 in that order. Keep the valves in order in a stick as far as possible and figure on refacing ones that have to be swapped around. On a D2 head you can just oil them, stuff them in the holes and lay the head on a padded table top to finish up. Pic #2 is a handy little spring compressor that I built and I like it better than anything else I've used. It just runs down the stud with a rocker nut and holds steady while you juggle the three little wedges into possition. To use it on the other valve I just turn it upside down; it's machined on both sides.
No doubt I've missed something. Feel free to comment.
Jack