G'day Fellas.
Continuing on from reply #95.
I used the old pins and heated the pistons with the hot air gun to mount them on the rods. Pushed in nice and easy, burnt my fingers before I used gloves
. Made a piston support out of the trusty nylon cutting board and ring compressors out of poly pipe and hose clamps. Installed two of the through studs to keep the barrels square and slid them down over the pistons. Less chance of breaking a ring that way.
Installed the studs with red loctite. I annealed the head gasket bring it up to red all over the when cooled gave it a good coat of coppercoat.
The head slid down the studs nicely and was torqued down to 20-25-30ftlb.
Next was the job we all love "not" the rocker box. I must have done it hundreds of times but it still took me two goes at it. As I don't use the springs on the rocker shafts (shimmed instead) the rockers flop down so use elastic bands to hold them up. You will notice the extra large cover studs and 4 long box bolts. This top end was from my 57 A7SS racer and all the threads were shot. Quick fix go bigger
. The beauty of it in a plunger means the rocker box isn't stressed by the s/a head steady so rarely leaks. For tappet clearance I gave them 12 and 14 to start.
Then it was time to throw all the ancillary bits on. Probably the most time consuming part of the job. I left the tank off and hooked up my auxiliary tank to see if she lives.
Third kick she bursts into life and ran for a couple of minutes. On with the tank and out on the road. I like to put load on as soon as possible. About 15 minutes around the back streets of Lithgow and back in the shed. Off with the primary to check the timing. Spot on 35 degrees so didn't touch it. Back on with the primary and back out on the road. This time up and down Scenic Hill twice to load her up a bit but not labor her.
All good, no horrible noises and no oil leaks
Cheers