...BTW your Bieber avatar is awesome.-Malone
I have always wondered what the stretch bolts were up to. If somebody is doing a head gasket here in the next little while and has a breakaway dial style torque wrench might be able to tell us. I think 53Willy's put 100 or maybe more on his studs to get the MLS to seal.Granted they are a bolt instead of a stud and they give, but I am a big dude and use a 24" breaker bar when I do them and it takes quite a bit of force to get the stretch bolts around. I don't know if I could do it with my 1/2" rachet with no cheater. I am with ya on this Rabbit TD I think you should be able to at least go 90 without problems. If ARP's alloys are as good as what they charge for them you should be able to pull the threads out of the block before you break the stud. Which the block is cast similar to so many SBChevys and you can torque them way over 100 without killing the block so I would think that you won't have any problem.
It occured to me earlier that you didn't mention an initial retorque after warming the engine. Did you do this or not? A fiber gasket must be retorqued after warming the engine and allowing it to cool. When the engine warms up, the block and head will expand, further compressing the head gasket. After the engine cools and everything contracts back to it's room temperature state, the gasket remains compressed and your studs will now be loose. I think it was determined that ARP's torque values will generate approximately 75% of the yield strength of the fastener. You really don't know what torque will generate 90% or 100 % or even 110% of yield. In my opinion, blindly increasing the stud torque to 100 ft-lbs will bring you very close to that 100% point. It's very nice to keep a safe margin of error on something that you'd like to remain reliable and bullet-proof. And once you cross that yield point, you've permanently deformed and degraded the fastener as it crosses from the elastic state into the plastic state. Chris
Again I think I got more off the point on what my original question in my mind is Does any body else think that the torque specs being 80 for the moly lube and 120 for motor oil seem a little extreme, obviously the bolts can go higher if they say that, that's a 50% difference in my mind and again those specs are for the gas motor they figure you are using them in to begin with and these ARP's are obviously stronger than the stretch bolts.
The only time I've come across the warm retorque requirement is with stretch bolts. Also, my MLS gasket sealed right up at 86 ft-lbs. (I've seen both 80 and 86 as the spec...)Chris
the warm retorque is for fiber gaskets...not stretch bolts...the bolts stayed the same when they went to MLS gaskets and have nothing to do with retorques...MLS gaskets do not normally need retorques..but fiber IMHO is a MUST EVEN more if you wanna run higher then stock boost levels.my damn Thailand gasket took 110ftlbs to seal...must be the "made in China" thing..lol...