The final quarter turn is required with a fiber gasket because the gasket will compress with each heat/cool cycle and eventually stop returning to it's as-new thickness. 1000 miles gives enough time for the gasket to reach a consistent working thickness and the bolts need to be turned in to make up for this. Every fiber gasketed engine I've worked on, all the way back to pre-war American stuff requires a re-torque after a few heat/cool cycles. Metal gaskets don't compress and therefore don't require a retorque. Chris
Lol... Mark, I got as far as 'KATE', didn't know what the hell that was then skipped the rest. Engine codes don't help either, as long as you know what you have regarding gaskets, hardware and displacement. 'MF' means something foul to me... 'Me' is I, as far as I'm concerned... Cy played baseball.... I get frustrated when I see what could be a straightforward answer (same torque procedure for all 1.6 with fiber HG and stretch bolts) get lost in a bunch of speculation and discussion about torque values, which really shouldn't be considered when talking angular specs. The final quarter turn is required with a fiber gasket because the gasket will compress with each heat/cool cycle and eventually stop returning to it's as-new thickness. 1000 miles gives enough time for the gasket to reach a consistent working thickness and the bolts need to be turned in to make up for this. Every fiber gasketed engine I've worked on, all the way back to pre-war American stuff requires a re-torque after a few heat/cool cycles. Metal gaskets don't compress and therefore don't require a retorque. Chris
That's a vague question that could be taken under any context. Are you talking VW engines? ARP studs? What's the intended application of those studs? Why so quick to challenge what I posted? Do you disagree? And why?I'm relating my experience, as it applies to our 1.6 engines. Chris
...BTW your Bieber avatar is awesome.-Malone
No they didn't have one in there procedure. Sometimes I wonder if you read what I post. Think about it. They are having you start the engine to build heat.
Sounds like you got it.
Quote from: theman53 on August 11, 2011, 06:40:09 amNo they didn't have one in there procedure. Sometimes I wonder if you read what I post. Think about it. They are having you start the engine to build heat.I did read and understood what you posted. How else to build heat unless you start the engine? For VW's shipped to the tropics where they are not fitted with block heaters, what are you supposed to do? Build a fire under the engine? Keep pouring hot water on the engine? Put the car in a big oven?