Mild 6.0L Build Suggestions?

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1BADI5

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Yeah the normal spot where LS heads crack and leak coolant is around the head bolt surface.

Normal protocol for those heads in the shops I have worked at is to replace the head. Its to hard to guarantee a proper fix when leaking like that.
 
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Matthew Jeschke

Matthew Jeschke

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Yeah the normal spot where LS heads crack and leak coolant is around the head bolt surface.

Normal protocol for those heads in the shops I have worked at is to replace the head. Its to hard to guarantee a proper fix when leaking like that.
It wasn't cracked... It was corroded.

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Matthew Jeschke

Matthew Jeschke

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The guy who owned them before me had them in a racecar. I think he ran straight water and didn't bother adding any anti corrosion to the water. Our water here is EXTREMELY hard water, and from the looks of it I wonder if he didn't have a water softener (salt in the water). I saw it when I bought them but didn't think much of it. Figured it would clean up. But once the heads were cleaned up more and the machine shop looked at them...

They noticed that it had eaten into at least one of the seal rings for the combustion chamber. They looked at it for a while and said it could be repaired. They will add material, weld more aluminum, to those jackets and plain the head. I asked and they said they do it quite frequently and will be as good as new.

To their credit they said would be best to discard these heads and start with another set... However, I found it was $600 for a set of 317 heads ready to install, BUT they didn't have the 40 hours or so I put into polishing the exhaust and combustion chambers like these ones. So for $550 I get these heads cleaned up and rebuilt.

For whatever odd reason, the other head didn't have the corrosion on it, and looked great.

Inked20210308_161342_LI.jpg
 
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Matthew Jeschke

Matthew Jeschke

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OK......Heads needed to be welded? Waterjackets? Some of those places you can't even get too.
How many welds? If its more than 1 (and don't take this the wrong way) I would just throw those heads away.
Aluminum is very delicate to weld on. How do you test their welds? Validation of repair work is always critical.

Its not worth the risk of putting them on only to have a nagging small coolant leak.
Will they at least warranty against leaks?

I don't even like welded blocks and iron is much easier.

All your external parts look very pretty! Awesome Job!

In answer to your very deep cam question....I have no idea. I'm not an engine builder, thats a pretty specialized skill.
I buy defined short blocks, long blocks and slam them in. I've done heads and cam but not in an empty block.

You need an engine builder mentor.....someone who can help you navigate the process.
Maybe LS1Tech......lots of 6.0L guys over there....camaros & some trucks.
Or youtube.....always good for education....some take questions
(5) How To Build An LS Engine - Assembly Part 1 - YouTube
Thanks, been asking questions on LStech.com too. I think I built my last engine on there. Bottom end is pretty simple. Not much to it.

Thing that keeps me up at bight are the head bolts.

Guess I will find out how the welds work soon enough. They were confident it would be fine. When I read up more there is special equioment and process for just welding cast parts aluminum and steel.

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1BADI5

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Welding cast can work, but reliability depends on the application and the load that will be applied.

Only thing I have had success with was exhaust manifolds, even then it was a 50/50 shot.
 

fasteddy

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I agree with 1Bad
I would throw that head away. If the other is fine then its fine. Just buy one head.....on ebay they are $200-250 remfg'd, done?
Your corrosion or cause unknown could have been from overheating or boost or nitrous as the missing casting material is definitely into or very close to the combustion chamber. There had to have been a blown head gasket on that head .....in multiple places.

You're asking the machine shop to replace casting material in at least two critical areas sandwiched between the combustion chamber and waterjacket and head gasket........IMO (and I love you dearly) that's not a good decision.

It may last 2000-3000 miles then it'll just blow and it could contaminate your engine and your cooling system with all kinds of aluminum bits...you could have to tear down and start from scratch. And add to that possibly a new waterpump and radiator.

Its not worth the risk of jeopardizing all your hard work..for $200?
 
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Matthew Jeschke

Matthew Jeschke

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I hear ya, I had the machine shop go ahead and do it anyways. They said they fix them all the time for various issues including what I had. It's now completed and I cannot even tell which head formerly had the corrosion. The guy I bought them from said he had a good running motor and bought LS3 heads. The former owner also talks to me fairly regularly. I have him in my phone and chat about building LS stuff so sounds like it was the water jacket only. I have a bit of a case of get it done itis. But it doesn't really make me that nervous. Between them and an old mechanic that I'm friends with. The old mechanic built these trucks at GM till 2004, retired as a quality engineer, as well as flipped lots of cars, built motors, and transmissions in his spare time. He said he's seen and worked with all kinds of crank cases, heads, etc that were welded up despite industry practice is to discard them and he never had problems with the repairs. Long story short, I'm not that nervous about it. What I do want is an excuse to get those 205 AFR heads haha

What I'm currently grappling with are the piston rings. I got drop in rings from Mohle #42157CP. I've been chatting on Ls1Tech and responses are mixed. One guy says don't gap them. They are at 0.012" and 0.016" top/bottom. I looked up factory spec and that's the tightest they can be from factory. I also called Mohle tech support. They were SUPER helpful. The guy on the hotline said don't gap them, it's not necessary.

Lastly, I asked for final opinion at the machine shop. The engine builder said, absolutely gap them. Do 0.020" and 0.026". I see the rule of thumb for gapping is 0.016" and around 0.018". Another guy on LS1 tech did 0.20 and 0.026 for nitrous. I think the only compromise is a inconsequential loss in power of maybe 1 or 2 ft/lbs?

Bit of a mixed bag here. I don't have thermal expansion coefficient for the rings to do the math myself, nor an oven big enough to get the coefficient myself. But if I get the gap wrong the motor will blow up catastrophically haha. Kind of erring on opening them up a bit from what they currently are.

Head pictures below. I cannot even tell which head was which now.

20210319_133342.jpg 20210319_133346.jpg
 
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Matthew Jeschke

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using electrolysis to clean up old exhaust manifolds. Figured what they heck, why not. I will ceramic coat them (high temp paint at parts store), then put them on when done.

note to self... I should have taped up gasket mating surfaces as it pitted a bit there, possibly due to hookong up electrodes backwards for a bit before realizong my error but should tape reguardless. I will now need to sand down that surface.


79f0d19d86bae3c3116a9eeeb8e414ba.jpgf747ce6f8bb4fa33e9589a47444ed17b.jpg

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George B

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using electrolysis to clean up old exhaust manifolds. Figured what they heck, why not. I will ceramic coat them (high temp paint at parts store), then put them on when done.

note to self... I should have taped up gasket mating surfaces as it pitted a bit there, possibly due to hookong up electrodes backwards for a bit before realizong my error but should tape reguardless. I will now need to sand down that surface.


79f0d19d86bae3c3116a9eeeb8e414ba.jpgf747ce6f8bb4fa33e9589a47444ed17b.jpg

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Can you give a quick description of this process please?
 
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Matthew Jeschke

Matthew Jeschke

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There are tons if tutorials on internet if you search "remove rust eith electrolysis"...

that said,

plastic bucket
sacraficial metal piece
battery charger (dc)
washing soda (salt)

put parts in bucket keeping sacraficial metal away from parts in plastic container

fill with water, and dump in some washing soda

hook up negative to parts with rust

posative to sacraficial metal

takes hours or days depending on your mixuture.

i would goohle process for more details

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