according to manual maximum non-flattness of the head when it does not need any resurfacing is 0.1 millimeters and it seems not to hurt camshaft. it worked like this (deformed from years of service for more than 3 years and 25 000 kilometers) and camshaft (and camshaft bearing in the head) is still as good as new
according to manual maximum non-flattness of the head when it does not need any resurfacing is 0.1 millimeters and it seems not to hurt camshaft. it worked like this (deformed from years of service for more than 3 years and 25 000 kilometers) and camshaft (and camshaft bearing in the head) is still as good as newI don't mean to be arrogant (im not), but listen to your self; you say 0.1mm is max for resurfacing, you say (unless im wrong or you didn't give correct info) you took 0.18mm off cyl head to make flat/straight, that sounds to me like a whole different ball game??, in any case you've put a lot of money and work into cyl head already,, hope you don't pay for it more,,,
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in the machine shop when i told about the reccomendations in instruction manual they said that they have resurfaced tons of vw diesel heads and did not have any issues so far, also they told me that even if the head was within 0.1mm deformation specs leaving it that way would probably cause head gasket sealing problems and cost me another set of head bolts and head gasket 
. main bearing were 0.25mm undersized (according to emblem they were king bearings) and crank surfaces were little bit scored, but still were in good condition. so i will have my crankd machined for 0.25 oversizedrod and 0/50 oversized main bearing. i will be using kolbenshmidt bearings for the crank
and clevlite for intermediate shaft. if everything goes according to my plans i will have crank machined on monday or tuesday + tdi style spocket fitted.
i have not seen it removed yet), without excessive scoring or wear, so i will reuse them. they have some play in cylinder bores but that will not be a big issue if i use new ring (i will check ring gaps tomorrow and deciide to buy new ones or not) + i will hone cylinders
. . . but on petrol engines you can and have to resurface the block if you have deformation 0.06mm-s or more (it seems that cam journals do not deform so hard, because they are way far from head gasket surface), still i do not know why the do not recomend resurfacing on diesels at all (enev at 0.4 mm deformation for example)
.. . . but on petrol engines you can and have to resurface the block if you have deformation 0.06mm-s or more (it seems that cam journals do not deform so hard, because they are way far from head gasket surface), still i do not know why the do not recomend resurfacing on diesels at all (enev at 0.4 mm deformation for example)
I've read of guys machining IDI heads with success. Possibly the reason to not do so is the super hard pre-chambers (which have a tendency to fall out) might loose their fit during the process? A surface grinder would definitely be easier on them as opposed to a fly-cutter on a mill.
As for the cam journals, if the head is warped, they are as well - makes no difference how far they are from the had surface as it's one chunk of aluminum. In other words, it doesn't 'grow" at the ends or "shrink" in the middle - it simply turns into a banana.
If you shaved the head, make sure you check your highest piston against the deck height ("piston protrusion") before you order the gasket There's a good section in the FAQ on this.
after resurfacing (only for removing old gasket parts) i will measure piston protrustion and buy cyl head gasket accordingly
i think machine shop will not work on the weekend so i have to wait for monday
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already bought the spocket for 13$ today, removed from used engine but in very good condition.
my crank is also machined to .25 mm on the main bearings. new pistons cost more than 200$ + honing, boring and resurfacing the block 60-70$, new bearings + crank machining will cost another 70-90$. 



cylinder walls still had honing marks on them and crank was in perfect condition for AAz
i have never seen siming spocket in such an good condition. but when i started the teardown, i found out that mainc bearings were changed.... and there was 0.25mm oversized bearing isntalled. n4 main bearing had bearing with oil passage on both sides (it is a good desicion for vw engines as i know. but bad things appeared when i removed the pistons... :| n1 & 4 pistons were in perfect condition, all the rings moving and no scoring at all, but 3 and 2 pistons had some scoring marks on the sides where pistons pin goes in
scoring marks were on cylinders too. also pistons mentioned above both had first compression ring stuck, on the sides where the scoring was present.
i measured the new pistons, and yes, they were oversized
80mm, every piston except for the third one has rings with perfect gaps.... on third psiton second compression ring has some signs of scoring from cylinder wall, but i can get those rings for dirt cheap 
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