lutorm wrote:Chromoly pushrods, which are common and are the ones in the Aerovee, obviously have a lot less thermal expansion, so unlike the aluminum ones the clearances will grow as the engine heats up. For this reason it's apparently common to set valve clearances with chromoly pushrods to as little as possible, which will still open up to more than 0.010" at operating temperature.
Designs utilizing these small clearances performed adequately for passenger car use, but consistently burned exhaust valves when used for extended full-throttle operation. To determine the cause, dynamometer tests were conducted utilizing a specially designed machine that could measure valve lash with the engine running at high RPM, at full throttle, and under load. These tests indicated that the exhaust valve stem would expand sufficiently to eliminate all of the valve lash and hold the valve off the seat...
SonexN76ET wrote:Patrik,
I think you may have things backwards.
Try this experiment:
Set your valves per the factory recommendation cold. Then run your engine up to operating temperature. Then when still hot, remove the valve covers and check the valve clearance. In my experience you will find those clearances have significantly decreased.
Jake
daleandee wrote:For your consideration ...
http://www.oceanstreetvideo.com/vwtech/ValveLashHiPoPushrods.htm
lutorm wrote:daleandee wrote:For your consideration ...
http://www.oceanstreetvideo.com/vwtech/ValveLashHiPoPushrods.htm
I looked at that page but it was so scatterbrained that I couldn't figure anything out. It seems to just be a bunch of random links to things about valve lash, not specifically for aircooled engines. I don't think you can take conventional wisdom from a water-cooled engine, where the engine temperature is much more stable.
the purpose of this article is to address the controversy regarding valve lash settings when running high performance chromoly pushrods in the vw type 1 engine.
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