harley1955
Well-known member
Was wondering just how far into the ports on the head to go when cleaning them out?
I'll keep my fingers crossed that you'll really only have a buildup at the lip.Not yet but give me an hour and I'll have them.
Fuel + Air = power. By cleaning the intake you're cleaning the air part of the equation. If you don't have power loss then, by that simple equation, it means that you aren't likely going to experience any significant increases in air flow (otherwise you would experience increased POWER [see equation]).The issue isn't the power loss it's junk left in the port. The flow through it has been changed. Is it going to stay put?
Picture (the one you linked to) shows enough for cylinders 1 and 2 (do I have that right, that #1 is to the front of the engine?). Both of these cylinders look like they have valves that might be open, second and forth cam lobes are down: definitely the second cam lobe, not sure about the forth.So counting from the left it appears that 2 and 4 are closed?
Huh?Fuel + Air = power. By cleaning the intake you're cleaning the air part of the equation. If you don't have power loss then, by that simple equation, it means that you aren't likely going to experience any significant increases in air flow (otherwise you would experience increased POWER [see equation]).
IF, as I've noted elsewhere, you're going to be doing mods, THEN I'd agree that you'd be looking at an increased risk from not cleaning (though, again, it depends on the degree of buildup).
I'm curious as to how much clogging crud resides past the lip area. In my car it was not of any real significance.
I'm as anal as the next person, but I do understand that there comes a point at which one encounters a point of diminishing returns.
As I stated, mods, I'm talking performance mods, are going to result in more power. More power can ONLY be derived if there is more air and fuel. In the case of the intake pathway we're talking air, more air, air that is likely being pushed harder and longer (by the turbo).Huh?
What do other mods have to do with the risk of something breaking loose and hanging up a valve?
All fine and good. I, however, operate based on probabilities, as just about anything is possible (given enough time).I look at the possible consequences here, not returns. Unless you look as diminished risk as a return.
Harley, that was my experience. I was quite concerned, but ran things through logic and decided that just flaking off the crumbs (yeah, not "flakes"- just kind of crumbly- of course, what would cause any problem would be any particles of significant size, and these would have to dislodge at exactly the perfect time to head toward the valve and valve seat and then stay in suspension in order to then get caught between the two as the valve closes) at the edge was sufficient. Yeah, something "could" happen, but I figured if I got all the larger crap that was sitting right there (only if I was a complete fumbler could I knock it the wrong way) I would just wipe it out. I used my thumb to press down and wipe the lip crud out. Was this a risk? Yes. What isn't a risk? Pulling the head would mean that I'd introduce quite a bit more actions, which introduces a variety of risks. Right now you're facing a singular risk.UhOh, well i took a hard look at the port and the greatest buildup is at the junction like you thought. How flaky were your ports? Other than the lip being a little flaky this stuff is like baked on tar, not flaky at all. If I remove the "lip" and smooth it down I really can't see any of this stuff ever coming off. To me to clean this really good the head would have to be pulled. I could scrape the throat and vacuum it out, because it's going to fall down on top of the valve, but i don't see any way I'm going to get this stuff off that's down in there. Any one with advice about this, feel free to chime in.