While we continue to ignore where the fuse gets lit most often, Folks,...
A few observations on head gasket surfaces:
The headbolt inserts I remember on Shovels were recessed, however the heads were still not 'flat'. I have no pics from the era, but a light grind on a flat surface often displayed low spots over both intake and exhaust ports. Metal moves.
(I preferred to grind them flat, rather than machine, as it took the least time (expense), and removed the least material.)
Pans certainly suffer from 'pulled' inserts, and I feel decades of duty were enough, although over-torquing made things worse:
SRTGRND2.jpg
Even this Chief cylinder deck shows a depression over both exhaust and intake ports:
warpage.jpg
deckwarp.jpg
The exhaust was detectable with the feeler gauge, but only a light grind illustrated the intake warpage.
Inspection must be diligent; Any stone unturned hides something that will bite you.
....Cotten
A few observations on head gasket surfaces:
The headbolt inserts I remember on Shovels were recessed, however the heads were still not 'flat'. I have no pics from the era, but a light grind on a flat surface often displayed low spots over both intake and exhaust ports. Metal moves.
(I preferred to grind them flat, rather than machine, as it took the least time (expense), and removed the least material.)
Pans certainly suffer from 'pulled' inserts, and I feel decades of duty were enough, although over-torquing made things worse:
SRTGRND2.jpg
Even this Chief cylinder deck shows a depression over both exhaust and intake ports:
warpage.jpg
deckwarp.jpg
The exhaust was detectable with the feeler gauge, but only a light grind illustrated the intake warpage.
Inspection must be diligent; Any stone unturned hides something that will bite you.
....Cotten
Comment