If using ARP you cannot go by what VW / bentley/ oem specs. ARP are not stretch bolts like OEM. With 11 block, I don't know if I would go with arp - no give if you over do it. At least oem will stretch or yeild. ARP will not.
What's confusing is the torque spec that came with the studs. ARP sez to torque to 80 ft lbs (in 3 equal steps). My Bentley only gets to 66 ft lbs. Given the well known fragility of the 11 mm blocks, I don't want to risk over-torquing yet again!I realize the lube they send with the kit is supposed to reduce the thread friction which will result in a lower clamping force for a given torque,
Quote from: sparkoid on October 03, 2012, 07:03:29 amWhat's confusing is the torque spec that came with the studs. ARP sez to torque to 80 ft lbs (in 3 equal steps). My Bentley only gets to 66 ft lbs. Given the well known fragility of the 11 mm blocks, I don't want to risk over-torquing yet again!I realize the lube they send with the kit is supposed to reduce the thread friction which will result in a lower clamping force for a given torque, With super slippy lube, you will have less friction on the threads, providing more clamping force at a given torque value.If the top threads are a different pitch, that would also change things.Don't 11MM bolts come in stretch and non-stretch flavor? 66 sounds like a non-stretch spec.
It was ft/lbs.Check the search when you can. some folks have torqued ARP studs really high...i think up to 120 ft/lbs in a sound block, but that might have been 12mm.Raceware studs seem to give people problems past 80 IIRC
R.O.R, what do you mean by "the real diesel studs"Prior searches are what led me to ARP to begin with, but maybe it's time to troll again...
R.O.R, what do you mean by "the real diesel stud"...
Quote from: sparkoid on October 04, 2012, 09:44:20 amR.O.R, what do you mean by "the real diesel stud"...I thought R.O.R was referrin to himself?