Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

This is also a question i have been asking my self and the reasons i have come up with apart from the fact that thats just what you do, has to do with the way the threads pull and the length of contact area is better having studs than bolts. Also alot of other really high performance stuff run studs standard, mostly bikes but its still a engine.

I hope that gives you a little reasoning even if it still comes out as do it once do it right. I will use them on mine when the head comes off.

I just got a few questions about the ARP studs, ive heard you need to re torque them after like the first 100km and that you cannot get to them without removing the cams is this true?

cam covers yes, cams no. most heads are assembled then put onto a block and torqued down?

so i dont see as to why the cams would need to be removed

cam covers yes, cams no. most heads are assembled then put onto a block and torqued down?

so i dont see as to why the cams would need to be removed

That is true, but in some instances it may not. It depends on the Cams you are using, most will have a notch taken out, that when you rotate the cam will allow access to the head of the bolt/stud, some cams may not have that notch.

I undid a set on a 25det that did have the notches and even with those we had a get a deep thin walled double hex (12 point) socket to suit (from memeory it was half inch) and with that we still had to grind it down a little but it worked. On the same subject does any one know the correct tension to do the studs up to in the block and should the threads be oiled? also do you use the same tension for the nuts as you would for the original bolts?

stock 25 head bolts are 10mm hex, i used a 10mm allen key with the short end cut off then a 10mm socket on that, worked very well and had no troubles with the cams in.

studs do not get torqued down into the block, hand tight only iirc. and yes use the standard torque settings for the nuts, the extra clamping force comes from the different thread design.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Bloody Skylines, they put you through the bloody wringer! Stick at it! Stunning drag strip BTW! Where is it? Can see part of the name on the slip and probably should just Google it!
    • I mean the other day I had to walk someone through diagnosing why their timing belt was walking off the cam gears. At least one of the issues was a bent tensioner stud. Local mechanics have found runout on the CAS mechanism causing weird failures. I'm also no saint here I've documented some of the things I've had to learn the hard way. Something I discovered recently is that my CA emissions catalytic converters weren't even welded correctly to align the downpipe to the main cat and they tossed the support bracket that goes from the transfer case to the downpipe to support everything there. I spend a lot of time chasing down these decidedly unsexy problems and the net effect is it feels like I never actually get to the original objective (flex fuel, VCAM, oil control, cooling, etc).
    • At times with how you make everything sound, all I imagine Americans doing when they see a gtr is standing there looking at it and bashing it with a gun like how a caveman would with a club and hoping it fixes itself 
    • I think this is just a product of how the US market works for this stuff. Shops are expensive and there's no real way of knowing what kind of results you're going to get, people don't really have the institutional knowledge. I have heard too much at this point to really put faith in anybody "full service" except maybe DSport and they aren't really a full service kind of shop. If you go to the right place I have no doubt they'll get it right for you. Some locals have set it up right but the cost really is nuts and even now they're still fighting issues. And you know I'm a crazy person who thinks things like twin scroll, relatively short low-mount cast headers, PCV recirc to intake, recirculating BOV, right-sized for ~400 whp, MAF load, validating all of that to a standard comparable to OEM test programs, etc are relevant. For what it's worth, multiple local owners at this point have been stuck in a perpetual cycle of blowing a motor -> getting someone to rebuild it -> some missed detail causes the bearings to wipe and spin just outside of break-in mileage or drop valves or some other catastrophe -> cycle repeats. I usually only find out about this because I'm perpetually helping random friends with diagnosing car troubles, Skyline or otherwise. The single turbo stuff if I'm honest is mostly secondary, it just doesn't seem to achieve the numbers in the ~2000-3000 rpm region that I would expect given the results I've seen here or in Motive's videos. I don't really know what we're missing here in the US to be causing this. Lots of people like to emphasize the necessity of finishing the project first and foremost, but I'm not made of money and I can't afford to be trashing a 15k+ USD engine build with any regularity. Or spending my relatively limited garage time these days unable to triangulate problems because too much was changed all at once. Also, even if it isn't a catastrophic failure I would consider spending the cost of single turbo conversion with nothing to show for it to be pretty bad. 
    • The water pump is know to leak as well. So if the coolant is low checking that first as well as hoses. 
×
×
  • Create New...