M42club.com - Home of the BMW E30/E36 318i/iS
DISCUSSION => Engine + Driveline => Topic started by: Selfish on February 27, 2009, 02:50:49 PM
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hi everyone. I'm about to tackle the task of replacing the head gasket on my 91, 318i, because I really miss driving it. I was wondering if anybody has done any head polishing and porting (or any other task that I should do while I'm at it, for that matter) and if so, is it a complicated process? I've seen some guys do it on youtube and it doesn't look hard at all. In fact, I'm more concerned about messing up when putting everything together after replacing the head gasket. I was going to have someone more experienced help me out, but the guy is always too busy for me, like he was going to do it for free....so I said f** it, I'll do it myself. All input or comments welcome.
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I've ported and polished the heads on a 91' 5.0 mustang, but not on a m42, it really isn't tht hard.
and since your a local, i'll help ya out...some ;)
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=how+to+port+and+polish+a+cylinder+head
cheers
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I also read in a blog somewhere that you can adjust (advance) the intake cam to get some extra top end horsepower, without having to buy adjustable cam sprockets, since (supposedly) M42 engines already have them tunable cam sprockets from the factory. Is this right?
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Not worth it.
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I also read in a blog somewhere that you can adjust (advance) the intake cam to get some extra top end horsepower, without having to buy adjustable cam sprockets, since (supposedly) M42 engines already have them tunable cam sprockets from the factory. Is this right?
yes, but best setting is factory.
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unless you trully know wtf you are doing - do yurself a HUGE favor & do NOT port/polish (read: butcher) your own head... you are just looking for trouble. its an exact science - done with flow benches and such...
also, scroll down this page & read what MM said about porting/polishing (in fact, read the entire thing), as it makes for some interesting material...
http://www.metricmechanic.com/catalog/porting-the-head.php
& this one regarding 'surface turbulence'...
http://www.metricmechanic.com/catalog/surface-turbulance.php
hi everyone. I'm about to tackle the task of replacing the head gasket on my 91, 318i, because I really miss driving it. I was wondering if anybody has done any head polishing and porting (or any other task that I should do while I'm at it, for that matter) and if so, is it a complicated process? I've seen some guys do it on youtube and it doesn't look hard at all. In fact, I'm more concerned about messing up when putting everything together after replacing the head gasket. I was going to have someone more experienced help me out, but the guy is always too busy for me, like he was going to do it for free....so I said f** it, I'll do it myself. All input or comments welcome.
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but if you really have your heart set on it - have these guys do it for you...
http://www.extrudehone.com/auto/auto-performance.php
http://www.gethoned.com/auto.php
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If you have the cash, Metric Mechanic has some nice head parts too :)
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hey guys, thanks a lot for all the info! IŽll keep you posted as to how did it go!
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unless you trully know wtf you are doing - do yurself a HUGE favor & do NOT port/polish (read: butcher) your own head... you are just looking for trouble. its an exact science - done with flow benches and such...
+1
There is a science to it, and if you are not familiar, you should not attempt, size and shape are huge factors in the final flow. You can actually loose horsepower if done incorectly.
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I would not be so harsh about small DIY headwork :eek:
You can remove irregularities left by machining ports, remove step between valve seat and port/combustion chamber and of course match intake manifold and head ports in case they are not perfectly aligned. Doing those should not lose any power, altough gains might not be huge either.
If you really want to modify port shapes and dimensions, then there is good possibility to ruin the head.
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yes, but best setting is factory.
"The best setup is to adjust the intake cam to 5 degrees (advanced) and leave the exhaust cam alone. "
That's false then?
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yes, but best setting is factory.
For midrange, I agree.