New stock exhaust manifolds or headers?

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

salisburyv

Full Access Member
Joined
Nov 17, 2021
Posts
143
Reaction score
167
i had to replace the passenger side manifold. RA. was cheap enough, and my mechanic said it was prob warped due to it leaking for a long time. Nice and quiet now.
 

OR VietVet

Multnomah Falls
Supporting Member
Military
Joined
Oct 8, 2014
Posts
20,712
Reaction score
36,497
Location
Willamette Valley
I just checked and I'm missing a head of a bolt closest to firewall on driver side :(
I believe that Dorman and another manufacturer that I cannot remember right now, makes a kit that clamps that tight and can replace that broken bolt at a later date. I have a couple kits on my rig that work just fine with no leaks.
 

donjetman

Full Access Member
Joined
Oct 22, 2018
Posts
1,530
Reaction score
2,713

Meccanoble

Full Access Member
Joined
Oct 3, 2016
Posts
1,166
Reaction score
355
Location
Georgia
3 of the 4 corner bolts were broke when I purchased our Denali 4+ yrs ago, so I installed:
Exhaust Manifold bridge clamp, back driver side – APDTY brand # 028218 - $30
Exhaust manifold bridge clamps, frt driver side, back pass side – APDTY brand #028253- $67
https://www.tahoeyukonforum.com/threads/lifter-tick-when-cold-berryman-b12.120184/post-1469315

I was looking on youtube and found a Dorman piece that had good reviews but wasnt sure how the forum would feel about it. Thanks for confirming. I just ordered the part you suggested. I will also order the better bolts and the gasket so i can do this all at once.
 

Meccanoble

Full Access Member
Joined
Oct 3, 2016
Posts
1,166
Reaction score
355
Location
Georgia
Are there any suggestions on how to take the other bolts off the manifold without destroying them? Would be upset if I ended up with more missing heads trying to install new bolts.
 

Geotrash

Dave
Supporting Member
Joined
Feb 16, 2018
Posts
6,426
Reaction score
15,920
Location
Richmond, VA
Are there any suggestions on how to take the other bolts off the manifold without destroying them? Would be upset if I ended up with more missing heads trying to install new bolts.
I had good luck when I pulled the manifolds to remove the heads on my 2012 a couple of years ago. I had it parked in the garage and soaked the bolts with penetrating oil 2-3x over a couple of days. Then before removing each one I gave it a couple of taps with a ball peen hammer. No problems, but I wasn't worried because I was pulling the heads anyway and could have the machine shop finish the job if I broke any of them.

If you decide to go the replacement route, best to budget the time and plan to remove the heads if you can't get one or more of them out. R&R of the cylinder heads is a full weekend job when you factor in the cleanup and everything else that goes with it. But once you're in that far, you might as well do a cam swap. And then since you have to remove the timing cover for that, you might as well drop the pan and change the o-ring. And then... you see where this is going :p
 
Joined
Apr 11, 2018
Posts
7,124
Reaction score
14,364
Location
St. Louis
I noticed the rear drivers side bolt head was missing on mine a couple months ago. It doesn't sound like it's leaking, but I have purchased the ARP bolt kit and have them for when I get around to doing them.

I figured I'd try the "weld a nut" onto the broken bolt trick, but I think I'll have to remove the header to do that because the broken stud is just below the surface of the header flange. I might be able to build up the weld though, but afraid of welding the stud to the header. Maybe get a small piece of copper tubing?

I didn't think about replacing the gaskets. Figured if I was lucky I'd just remove/replace one bolt at a time with the new bolts, but I think I'll buy the gaskets linked above and just go ahead and remove all bolts on each side and change out the gaskets and bolts.

How much clearance/play will there be with the header unbolted from the head but still bolted at the collector?
 

TollKeeper

Full Access Member
Joined
Feb 21, 2010
Posts
3,042
Reaction score
6,046
Location
Brighton, CO
I noticed the rear drivers side bolt head was missing on mine a couple months ago. It doesn't sound like it's leaking, but I have purchased the ARP bolt kit and have them for when I get around to doing them.

I figured I'd try the "weld a nut" onto the broken bolt trick, but I think I'll have to remove the header to do that because the broken stud is just below the surface of the header flange. I might be able to build up the weld though, but afraid of welding the stud to the header. Maybe get a small piece of copper tubing?

I didn't think about replacing the gaskets. Figured if I was lucky I'd just remove/replace one bolt at a time with the new bolts, but I think I'll buy the gaskets linked above and just go ahead and remove all bolts on each side and change out the gaskets and bolts.

How much clearance/play will there be with the header unbolted from the head but still bolted at the collector?
When I replaced the head gasket on my Saab, I took a ratchet strap, wrapped it around the exhaust manifold inbetween 5 and 7, and took the other end, and put it thru the wheel well. Then took the other end of the ratchet strap, and tied it off at the lower spoke of the wheel. Then I just ratcheted it until I got the space I needed to do the job. On my Saab, it was about 3 inchs, which was plenty.. But I also wasnt dealing with the broken bolt, just pulling the head. You have a wider engine bay than my Saab, so I would imagine you could get a bit more. I was against the frame at about 3 inchs..
 

Geotrash

Dave
Supporting Member
Joined
Feb 16, 2018
Posts
6,426
Reaction score
15,920
Location
Richmond, VA
When I replaced the head gasket on my Saab, I took a ratchet strap, wrapped it around the exhaust manifold inbetween 5 and 7, and took the other end, and put it thru the wheel well. Then took the other end of the ratchet strap, and tied it off at the lower spoke of the wheel. Then I just ratcheted it until I got the space I needed to do the job. On my Saab, it was about 3 inchs, which was plenty.. But I also wasnt dealing with the broken bolt, just pulling the head. You have a wider engine bay than my Saab, so I would imagine you could get a bit more. I was against the frame at about 3 inchs..
On the Yukon, you can loosen both sides and get plenty of slack in the headers by dropping them down with a jack under the y-pipe.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
132,305
Posts
1,865,699
Members
96,894
Latest member
TheShiznit
Top