I just came across an interesting post by Bob Hoover about head cooling. I can't find it now (edit:
here), but he states that on stock VW heads there is supposed to be a (frequently absent) blocking plate on the bottom, between the cylinders. In this area:
It prevents the air from flowing straight down and out through this rather large hole and instead forces it through the cooling fins on the bottom of the heads. The fins on the Aerovee heads also have an indentation in this area, indicating that something's supposed to be located here. Something like this:
I've never come across anything about this in the Aerovee instructions or on this forum. Has anyone heard about it and added such a plate? It makes sense that you don't want air to flow freely through this rather large hole but instead force it through the fins. I'm going to make some squares and RTV them in place on our heads, it certainly can't hurt, but I wonder if anyone's heard of or tried this before?
I also went all out on drilling out the air passages around the exhaust port:
I'm not sure the hole on the right, next to the exhaust valve guide, really should be there. I had to drill through maybe 5mm of material to get through there. But it seems weird to not have any airflow there since you just get a bunch of stagnant air in that pocket otherwise.
I also got a bit innovative and drilled an air passage hole for the fin cavity on the left in the picture above, next to the exhaust flange. You can't drill through the head here, the exhaust studs are in the way, but you
can drill diagonally. Like this:
This hole will still exit below the baffles, so it should work normally, and having a through-hole in all the cavities here should improve cooling a lot over just having stagnant air sit in them. And there's a lot of clearance to the exhaust port itself, I'm not at all worried about the material being too thin.
What do you guys think? Crazy?
(The images are a bit cut off when viewed in-line, it seems. If you right-click on them and "open in new tab", you'll see the whole thing. Nothing important is missing, though.