Just replaced my head gasket and torqued the cylinder head nuts to the correct torque.
I seem to recall reading somewhere that they should be checked after a certain milage. Is this right and if so after how many miles?
Checking Torque Settings
- HxPaul
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I just run mine around the block and get the cylinder head hot. and let it go cold. Do the same again,when the cylinder head goes cold I then re-torque the cylinder head nuts,thats it.
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I know this will get an whole load of flake but I don't re-torque mine anymore. When I started I never had a torque wrench that went down that low so I never used one. When I came back into scootering I read how important it was so I checked a few but they never moved so I have abandoned the idea.
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I largely agree, as I have never re-torqued. With any engine I am building, I also ensure absolutely first class threads, genuine OEM type rolled studs with heavy duty, hard washers & torque up to a higher figure in conjunction with Copaslip type grease.Tractorman wrote: ↑Sat Oct 10, 2020 9:02 am I know this will get an whole load of flake but I don't re-torque mine anymore. When I started I never had a torque wrench that went down that low so I never used one. When I came back into scootering I read how important it was so I checked a few but they never moved so I have abandoned the idea.
I torque up in three stages (say, 5 lb/ft initially, then more etc)
However, the fundamental cure for head leakage is to eliminate the weak link. I have not used head gaskets since the early 70's & will not do so again.
I have stripped down many an engine in my time & have never found evidence of the head gasket having effectively sealed. They always leak, even if that appears as 'only' a little weep.
Why have the grief of sealing either side of a gasket when, if it is discarded, having to seal up just the head to barrel?
It's a no brainer IMHO

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Interesting. Is that with standard Lambretta cylinders and heads, or "special" ones?However, the fundamental cure for head leakage is to eliminate the weak link. I have not used head gaskets since the early 70's & will not do so again.
- coaster
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Works for any type of head but the important thing is that the contact surface is perfectly flat. Large sheet of emery, a flat surface , paint the gasket face with a felt tip and slide the head in a fugure of 8 motion until all felt tip removed
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Any engine that I build inevitably has the head modified to suit the engine. So the heads are all "special"
Just as the whole head/barrel/crankcase are all optimised to function as an assembly.
TBH I'm uncertain that any proprietary head deemed to be correct for any barrel/piston is ever going to be spot on, so volume & squish corrections are inevitable, requiring form tools & fixtures on a lathe. As that is being done, then the head may as well be spigotted to the barrel to ensure a seal.
The days of "bolt on power" are long gone, because even in the World of RB20 racing where modification is limited, there is still a lot that is achieved via careful blueprinting.....