Quote from: "rallydiesel"I have ARP's and used the normal pattern and torqued to 80 ft lbs. and then to 100 ft lbs. after a warm up.you running the stock fiber gasket??what kinda boost numbers are you pushing??
I have ARP's and used the normal pattern and torqued to 80 ft lbs. and then to 100 ft lbs. after a warm up.
Stretch bolts or studs can indeed stretch under load, causing sealing problems.That's why I wasn't content with ARPs and instead went for custom studs.
Quote from: "Luckypabst"I'm confused about all this head stud quandary. There should be no debate or variation - just follow the manufacturer's specification, e.g. 80 ft-lbs for ARP 12mm studs with ARP lube and a retorque after one heat/cool cycle. Fastener torque is a function of material composition, diameter and thread pitch. ChrisSurely you mean fastner 'strength' is a function of your variables... Torque is function of the job you wish to accomplish isn't it :?: ....
I'm confused about all this head stud quandary. There should be no debate or variation - just follow the manufacturer's specification, e.g. 80 ft-lbs for ARP 12mm studs with ARP lube and a retorque after one heat/cool cycle. Fastener torque is a function of material composition, diameter and thread pitch. Chris
I need to double check, but the 11mm ARP studs I just installed in my 1.5 came with instructions that said to torque to 60 ft-lb. I only have ~60 miles on the rebuild, but it sounds like I could do an additional torque to 80 ft-lb after a couple hundred more miles and then call it good? Or should I do it sooner rather than later?For what it's worth, I'm not losing any coolant or oil at all so far... but I'm seeing oil pressures well in excess of 100 psi (pegged to the back side of the stop in my mechanical 100 psi gauge) when cold, measured at the head. Once warmed up, it gets up to 100psi when floored still, but at idle it's around 30 psi.
"Aren't these studs universal... in that I assume they might be used in other engines after all VW doesn't have a patent on 12mm studs; so that the same stud will likely have a slip of paper carrying different tightening spec, for a different engine or are all heads clamped the same? [/color]
I need to double check, but the 11mm ARP studs I just installed in my 1.5 came with instructions that said to torque to 60 ft-lb. I only have ~60 miles on the rebuild, but it sounds like I could do an additional torque to 80 ft-lb
Fastener torque is the same across the board, regardless of the engine design/brand/etc. As I said, the torque spec is a function of the fastener design, not the engine design. The fastener will break long before "crushing" the head or pulling *undamaged* threads from the block. The slip of paper says "80 ft-lbs with ARP lube". Then 60 ft-lbs would be the spec for 11mm studs. Don't overtorque to 80 ft-lbs.Chris
Torque values are based on 75% of the fasteners yield strength. Use the manufacturers torque sequence but do not use the engine manufacturers torque specs. Torque the nuts to 80ft. lbs. for ARP MOLY ASSEMBLY LUBRICANT (or ARP THREAD SEALER) or torque the nuts to 120ft. lbs. with 30wt. motor oil.
I need to double check, but the 11mm ARP studs I just installed in my 1.5 came with instructions that said to torque to 60 ft-lb. I only have ~60 miles on the rebuild, but it sounds like I could do an additional torque to 80 ft-lb after a couple hundred more miles and then call it good? Or should I do it sooner rather than later?