I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
Sort of. There's definitely a lot of stress relieving and recrysalisation and aging required when working with metal.
Typically it's more scientific that leaving it out in the rain though
Typically it's more scientific that leaving it out in the rain though
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
I'd say there are probably advantages to leaving the blanks outside. Being outside it/they would go through cycles of heating and cooling whereas inside a building the temperature tends to be constant. Rain wouldn't really be a problem, as the outer surface would be machined off anyway.
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
Yeah but unless you build your factory on the surface of the moon I wouldn't have thought the weather was enough to matter.
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
In Italy you'd get swings of nearly 50 degrees C in some years (+40 to -10) and regularly swings of 40 deg C. That would have an effect.
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
Today I drove from Sheffield to Darwen to drop the van off at AW Engineering. The route I used included Snake Pass and on one part of it one side of the carriageway had suffered a landslip, and only one lane was in operation. I've no idea when it happened but I'm very glad I wasn't there when it let go (there was a long drop involved). I kept the revs down and tried as best I could to avoid calling for turbo boost and once again the van made the journey without any low coolant bleeping noises.
On the way over I got a call from Keith to tell me that I should drop the van off as planned but that he was in Wales trying to recover the various pieces of his roof that had broadcast themselves around his neighbour's fields. Apparently wind gusts measuring 105 mph had been recorded in the area. His partner was happy to show me round his workshop and it was very reassuring to see a fair number of reconditioned heads and other components sitting on shelves ready to be fitted. All the work is done in house and nothing of Chinese origin is allowed anywhere near.
More news as it happens.
On the way over I got a call from Keith to tell me that I should drop the van off as planned but that he was in Wales trying to recover the various pieces of his roof that had broadcast themselves around his neighbour's fields. Apparently wind gusts measuring 105 mph had been recorded in the area. His partner was happy to show me round his workshop and it was very reassuring to see a fair number of reconditioned heads and other components sitting on shelves ready to be fitted. All the work is done in house and nothing of Chinese origin is allowed anywhere near.
More news as it happens.
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
Not even a chow mein or a cheeky spring roll?
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
Aye, you might call it Chinese but it'd be made in Lancashire, lad...
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
Had a progress report a few minutes ago - the head gasket had blown between cylinder #4 and the coolant gallery and the engine is now being rebuilt with a reconditioned cylinder head that has new valves, stem seals, valve guides and hydraulic lifters. It was on the shelf ready to go, so saves time and faffing about.
All good, so far.
All good, so far.
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
A few (quite a lot really, about 50) years ago I went around the Holman's foundry. They built compressors, some with Ford engines, some more expensive ones with RR engines, but the blocks were cast in the foundry before being sent off to be machined and built up. Ford blocks were left in the yard for about 12 months, RR for 3 years minimum.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Sat Nov 30, 2024 5:22 pm Sort of. There's definitely a lot of stress relieving and recrysalisation and aging required when working with metal.
Typically it's more scientific that leaving it out in the rain though
Cornish Tart #1
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
It's going to be a slow process at UK outside temperatures but they will get temperature cycled.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Sat Nov 30, 2024 5:22 pm Sort of. There's definitely a lot of stress relieving and recrysalisation and aging required when working with metal.
Typically it's more scientific that leaving it out in the rain though
Be a lot quicker (and a tad more scientific) in a big oven-y thing*.
* or whatever they call heat treatment units.
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But certainty is an absurd one.
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
My first ever 'real' job was working at Rolls-Royce on primary plant for Nuclear subs. They had BFO stuff forged by Sheffield Forgemasters which had to hand around for multiple years after being forged. Plus the 10 year waiting list on the front
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
Can't mention Foregemasters without thinking of the scorpion.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Wed Dec 11, 2024 6:30 pm My first ever 'real' job was working at Rolls-Royce on primary plant for Nuclear subs. They had BFO stuff forged by Sheffield Forgemasters which had to hand around for multiple years after being forged. Plus the 10 year waiting list on the front
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
Got a phone call a few minutes ago to tell me the van is fixed and ready for collection! Recon cylinder head was £450, sundries £36.50, labour £550, total came to £1243.80. That's around half what the garage in Sheffield quoted me. I asked Keith about the general state of the bores etc. and he said the motor should be good for another quarter of a million miles. The above also included swapping the old turbo for a new one I'd bought earlier in the year.
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
Fab stuff... you can get home in half the time you took to get there
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
Yes, I'll be very interested to try out the new turbo... Cylinder heads/valves don't need running in, do they?
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
And twice the fuel.
They sound like a bit of a find though, the Lancs chaps.
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But certainty is an absurd one.
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
I'll defer final judgement until I've put some miles on it, but based on cost and value for money I'd say they're a winner. It's not often you find someone that not only personally reconditions the part you need, but fits it as well, and for a very reasonable cost.Count Steer wrote: ↑Thu Dec 12, 2024 3:15 pmAnd twice the fuel.
They sound like a bit of a find though, the Lancs chaps.
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
Random little factoid about high mileage vans....
Was just talking to my colleague about bonding bits together. He used to work at AP Racing on clutches. They one made a bunch of clutches with a new kind of bonding between the friction material and the steel backing plates (normally it's riveted together), a bunch of these units went to the Royal Mail for real world testing in vans.
Fast forward ten years and he gets a call from some random guy who'd bought an old RM van. He was replacing the clutch and found a phone number written on the friction plates - my colleague's mobile number. Matey wanted a new clutch after >400k on the original one. They had to disappoint him and tell him that particular super long life clutch was only every meant to be a prototype
Was just talking to my colleague about bonding bits together. He used to work at AP Racing on clutches. They one made a bunch of clutches with a new kind of bonding between the friction material and the steel backing plates (normally it's riveted together), a bunch of these units went to the Royal Mail for real world testing in vans.
Fast forward ten years and he gets a call from some random guy who'd bought an old RM van. He was replacing the clutch and found a phone number written on the friction plates - my colleague's mobile number. Matey wanted a new clutch after >400k on the original one. They had to disappoint him and tell him that particular super long life clutch was only every meant to be a prototype
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
The van is now back in Sheffield, having enjoyed the delights of rush-hour Manchester and the M60. And Glossop. And Snake Pass. When at AW Eng, Keith showed me the failed head gasket; apparently there were two fractures of the gasket material, one on cyl #4, the other on cyl #2. And interestingly, he found a failed water temperature sensor. This may or may not have been significant, given that Keith reckons most head gasket failures are the result of an overheating event.
The other point of interest was the turbo. Swapping out a turbo that's done 260k miles for a new one is a bit of a no-brainer, but I suspect that the van would benefit from a re-map to optimise the new combination. We shall see.
The other point of interest was the turbo. Swapping out a turbo that's done 260k miles for a new one is a bit of a no-brainer, but I suspect that the van would benefit from a re-map to optimise the new combination. We shall see.
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Re: I have a horrible feeling my T4 van's head gasket is toast
All this leaving out in the rain for months yada yada sounds like bollocks to me compared to us sending pressure vessels off to be Normalised by heating just above its critical temperature* then allowing to cool slowly in air.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Sat Nov 30, 2024 5:22 pm Sort of. There's definitely a lot of stress relieving and recrysalisation and aging required when working with metal.
Typically it's more scientific that leaving it out in the rain though
*Can't remember if its AC1, AC2 OR AC3, meh, was a while ago I read up on this stuff and even then I was no expert.