pappas wrote: As for myself, I have never heard about the practice to change valve lash clearance from the factory recommended to something else. I know that the valve clearances I had set on my engine were always at .008 for intake and .014 for exhaust.
I don't have my Aerovee engine manual handy, but that seems like a lot of valve clearance, particularly for an engine with steel push rods.
As the case, barrels, and heads get hot, the engine gets wider. The stock aluminum pushrods get longer, so the lash stays more or less the same. On our engines, with more cam lift and stronger valve springs, we use STEEL pushrods, which do NOT get longer as fast as aluminum, thus the valve lash opens up as the engine gets hot. Car guys that run steel pushrods reduce the COLD valve clearance, so that it won't be too much HOT, and typically set it at zero to .002". Typical suggestions for aluminum pushrods are .004" to .006" cold.
Even though my new to me but circa 2000 engine (naturally aspirated) has steel pushrods, and unless the manual says otherwise, I'm sticking with .006" (which is what Steve Bennet of Great Plains suggests).
Too much clearance means the valves will likely clatter and, over the long term, may damage the valves, camshaft lobes, tappets. And possibly the adjusters...
LATER EDIT: It looks like the factory indeed recommends that big exhaust valve clearance for the turbo. The other effect I didn't mention is the heating of the valve itself, which causes the stem to "stretch". I guess on the turbo the exhaust valves run so hot this is necessary. I'm leaving this post up, for the Good Of The Order, but Lou WAS running the Aerovee recommended clearance. Off to dig for the Naturally Aspirated manual to see what it says....