FE-FC Holden Discussion Forum

Technical Board => General Technical => Topic started by: ardiesse on January 06, 2017, 03:23:51 PM



Title: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: ardiesse on January 06, 2017, 03:23:51 PM
There are some Holdens which just never overheat.  My father's FJ was one of those.  It would have been 1964 (I was too young to remember) we were driving from Perth to Armidale.  My great-aunt was with us, and when she drove, she drove at 80.  Miles.  In the stinking summer heat.  The you-beaut Toyo tyres Dad bought were turning squishy and losing their treads.  Inside the car, we were expiring from the heat.  But the FJ never complained.  Never lost its cool.

There are some Holdens which are chronic overheaters.  My FC is one of those.  When I was restoring it, I knocked the welch plugs out and Gerni'd all the scale and mud out of the water jackets.  I cleaned and reverse-flushed the radiator, and thought I'd be ok.  Around town, it usually was.  Long trips were a different matter.  I overheated twice on the way to the 2012 Nats, at Broken Hill and Ceduna.  Even going to Tassie in 2014, I lost about a litre of water between Sydney and Melbourne, and also on the return trip.  Repeat in 2016.  I lost most of my coolant trying to keep up with Mick Koetsier between Brisbane and Toowoomba.  The final straw was driving out to Penrith in November for the Christmas party, thinking, "hmm, smells of coolant" and having the temperature light come on right at a servo at Emu Plains to find I'd lost maybe two litres of water.

The symptoms were:

Cooling system pressurises, even on a short trip.  Even though the radiator doesn't feel all that hot to hand.

The coolant foams, even on a short trip.  One exception though: climbing Mt Roland in Tassie one morning when it would have been about zero degrees.  I undid the radiator cap after stopping.  No foam, no pressure.

On longer drives, the cooling system loses coolant.  Which then covers everything in the engine bay.  At the end of a long drive, I'd usually leave a small puddle of coolant on the road where I stopped.

It's beginning to sound like localised hot-spots in the engine, somewhere.

The preventative measures I took were:

Remove the thermostat.  Shit yeah.  At the end of a 40-degree day in Ceduna with an overheating car, why not?

Give the radiator a good clean-out with oxalic acid, followed by a reverse-flush.  Give the engine a good oxalic acid clean-out while I'm at it.

Pull the motor out, strip it down, get the block decked and the head machined to eliminate the possibility of a leaking head gasket . . . this turned into a rings-and-bearings job and a spun rear main oil seal fiasco.

Test the pH of my radiator water afterwards and confirm that it's pH 7, so no leakage of combustion gases into the cooling system at all.

Replace the aftermarket water pump with a good original one.  No change in temperature.

Try a different radiator.  No change in temperature.

Bugger it.  I'd just finished watching the Triumph Stag episode of "For the Love of Cars" where the garage used IR imaging cameras and temperature probes to determine the behaviour of the Stag's dodgy cooling system, and thought, "if the Poms can do that with a Stag, I can do the same with a Holden."  I "borrowed" a four-channel digital thermometer from work and bought a couple of stainless-sheathed industrial thermocouples and the right adaptors to suit 1/2" BSP.  I put the industrial thermocouples in the cylinder head at the threaded holes (it's an EJ motor), taped a third thermocouple to the radiator top tank, and a fourth to the radiator bottom tank.

And this is what I found -

This was a cold day in July, about 17 degrees, after climbing Mona Vale Rd to St Ives.  No thermostat in cooling system.

Top tank: 57 (i.e. ambient + 40)
Bottom Tank: 52 (i.e. ambient + 35)
Rear cyl head: 78 (i.e. ambient + 60)
Front cyl head: 78 (i.e. ambient + 60)

It looks like the radiator's doing its job, but something's seriously wrong with coolant flow inside the engine.

I figure that there's a hydraulic short-circuit inside the motor: the two holes in the block and head in front of number 1 cylinder.  The water pump is pumping coolant into the block, but most of it is going straight up in front of number 1 cylinder, into the head, out the thermostat housing and into the radiator.  The rest of the engine is being starved of coolant, leading to localised boiling, coolant loss, foaming, pressurisation at low temperatures, and if not stopped, a cracked head.

(http://i1054.photobucket.com/albums/s487/ardiesse/coolingsystemfix/coolingsystembad_zpst26pbb4l.jpg) ($2)

I don't want to push my luck with Photobucket too much now that I've linked an image, so I'll hit "post".

Rob


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Errol62 on January 06, 2017, 03:56:34 PM
Fascinating reading. Can't wait till you get to the chapter where you pressurise the cooling system with liquid nitrogen.


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Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: ardiesse on January 06, 2017, 04:08:43 PM
Errol,

The liquid nitrogen is used to cool resistive loads when doing noise parameter measurements on low-noise amplifiers.
Wait a minute.  That's what I get paid to do.

Did I ever mention that the old-timers at work used to remove their own warts with a cotton-wool bud dipped in liquid nitrogen?  More convenient and much cheaper than getting it done by a GP . . .

Rob


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: ardiesse on January 06, 2017, 04:23:33 PM
So my FC's motor is suffering from poor coolant circulation right where all the heat is being generated.  It would be good to confirm the previous temperature measurements on another motor, and fortunately I have one to hand: a "parts-bin" 3-3/16" bore FB motor which I run on a stand.

Same July day.  17 degrees.  No thermostat.  Running at idle puts the most stress on the cooling system.

Top Tank: 56 (i.e. ambient + 40)
Bottom Tank: 50 (i.e. ambient + 35)
Rear cyl head: 66 (i.e. ambient + 50)
Front cyl head: 67 (i.e. ambient + 50)

By and large the measurements are confirmed.  The radiator temperatures are the same as before.  Coolant temperature is higher inside the engine than at the radiator.  Although the temperature rise is ten degrees less in this motor.  Makes me think that for reasons unknown, EJ motors are more prone to overheating than earlier grey motors.  Which may be why this item appeared . . .

GMH Service Note AN 1627

In 1963(?), GMH released a revised head gasket, part number 7424869.  The fitting instructions read:

"Fitting this gasket results in an increased flow of cooler water to the rear cylinders and valve seats, and is designed for use on vehicles operated at prolonged high speed or under conditions where severe operating temperatures are experienced.
1. Remove cylinder head and thoroughly clean all carbon from around cylinder head and block.
2. Rework existing rear water jacket holes in cylinder head and cylinder block to dimensions shown in Figs. 1 and 2. (Hole on LHS to 5/8", hole on RHS to 7/16")
3. Remove all burrs from around the the holes, then flush out filings from the head and block.
4. When fitting the cylinder head gasket it is important to ensure that the gasket is correctly located, so that the revised holes in the rear of the cylinder block coincide with the holes in the rear of the gasket."

"NOTE: A number of cooling holes in the cylinder head and block are blanked off by the new gasket; this is normal and is designed to direct a greater flow of cooler water to the rear of the engine."

(http://i1054.photobucket.com/albums/s487/ardiesse/coolingsystemfix/coolingsystemgood_zpsjemh0r49.jpg) ($2)

I managed to score one of these head gaskets from Stan Bennett at a swap meet a couple of years back.  Twelve holes in total are blanked off in this gasket: two in front of number 1 cylinder, three on the left side under the inlet ports, both holes beside number 1 combustion chamber, and the front holes beside combustion chambers 2 to 6.

I figured I could try to "fake" a revised head gasket by cutting blanks out of Teflon sheet and putting them in the holes to be blanked off.

Bear with me a bit.  I've got some photos, but they're on my camera, and I don't have it with me at the moment.

Rob


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: ardiesse on January 06, 2017, 09:11:05 PM
Now I got to work with the Teflon sheet, cut out the blanks, pulled the head off the "test" motor, and fitted the blanks in place.  I drilled the small hole behind number 6 out to 7/16", but because I didn't have a 5/8" drill, left the other at its original size.

This is what it looked like before I put the cylinder head back on.

(http://i1054.photobucket.com/albums/s487/ardiesse/coolingsystemfix/teflon_zpsqergher4.jpg) ($2)

The head gasket to the side of the motor is the modified version, 7424869, showing the holes which are blanked off.

Bolted the head back on, and . . .

Winter day.  17 degrees.  No thermostat.

Top Tank: 55 (i.e. ambient + 40)
Bottom Tank: 50 (i.e. ambient + 35)
Rear cyl head: 56 (i.e. ambient + 40)
Front cyl head: 57 (i.e. ambient + 40)

The GMH engineers knew their craft.  The temperature distribution inside the motor is significantly improved, and peak coolant temperatures have been lowered ten degrees.

Here's the "test" motor on its stand, with thermocouples inserted into all its orifices:

(http://i1054.photobucket.com/albums/s487/ardiesse/coolingsystemfix/thermo_zpslrpsqvlg.jpg) ($2)

I think I know what I have to do now to my FC's motor, but it's going to be an engine-out job.  Again.  Because there won't be enough space to get a drill down behind number 6 cylinder.

Rob


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Errol62 on January 06, 2017, 09:38:34 PM
Brilliant. In the mines they would put liquid nitrogen in the 180 and 240 tonne dump trucks tyres to reduce temperatures and increase life.


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Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: hsv-001 on January 07, 2017, 09:45:20 AM
Rob , could you give me a short explanation of why oxalic acid to clean engine block . Years ago I would use it to clean leather when building stock saddles . I know it is commonly used to clean timbers before staining or varnishing . I just thought it might be too mild to do too much , but maybe that is the point . Cheers Haydn


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: hsv-001 on January 07, 2017, 09:58:28 AM
Sorry posted before I was thinking . 1989 was travelling from Brisbane to Thargomindah . The motor I had was only in place for about a week and I had been told it was originally built for a speed car . I had to give the original triples back to the guy but I could not get it to run well with the existing cam. Anyway long story short ,about 7 hours of average speeds 80 to 100mph smelt water boiling so I stoped at the upcoming small town for coffee and some water . I drove that same motor for years at 60mph and never had a problem after that , so I guess the water [coolant ] can flow too short and too fast and I believe that the original splash guards can make a huge difference .Haydn


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: ardiesse on January 07, 2017, 10:23:05 AM
Haydn,

Oxalic acid is often used as a bleaching agent, for example, I bought mine as Diggers "Rust and Stain Cleaner."  Chemically, it's a weak acid, but it forms a complex with the Fe(III) ion.  In English, that means it dissolves rust, but only reacts slowly with metallic iron.

And a warning.  Oxalic acid is poisonous.  It's the active ingredient in rhubarb leaves, which is why you don't eat them.  And oxalates, the compounds, are nasty too.

That said, I've found that oxalic acid is fantastic for getting the rust off tools.  A day or so in a concentrated solution works wonders.  And it also works really well for removing rust sediment from inside radiators and cooling systems.  On rust scale, oxalic acid works much more slowly.  It seems to loosen scale, rather than actually dissolving it outright.

Rob


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: ardiesse on January 07, 2017, 01:27:26 PM
Deep breath.  After my local Repco took two weeks to acquire a grey motor head gasket (you just don't want to know . . .), I pulled the motor out of the FC on the weekend before Christmas.  It's much easier to do a job like this one when the motor and gearbox are in a stand.

Step 1 was easy.  No it wasn't.  The newer style of head gasket glues the head effectively to the block.  My usual trick of socket-extension-in-inlet-port-and-lift didn't budge the head.  Neither did cranking the motor over.  With hindsight I should have loosened all the head bolts off a couple of turns and started the motor.  Instead, I dodgied up a cylinder head jack.  It's a piece of steel which sits on two head bolts, and has holes to engage two bolts where the rocker pedestal goes.

Here it is:

(http://i1054.photobucket.com/albums/s487/ardiesse/coolingsystemfix/headjack_zps0hrf15mp.jpg) ($2)

Step 2: Taking a drill to my motor was a stressful business though.  The drill tended to catch at the end, so I finished the holes with a round file.  Then there was

Step 3.  At first I used a magnet-on-a-stick, but I drew up scale, mud and swarf in equal proportions.  So I Gerni'd the water jackets until no more mud or scale came out the drain-plug hole.  The cylinder head was easier to clean out.  Which left the radiator.  I filled it with oxalic acid solution, laid it flat on the BBQ, and brought it up to a gentle boil.  Poured the now murky oxalic acid out, and did a reverse-flush with a garden hose and an air gun, until the water came out clear.  I had to fish a fair bit of scale out of the top tank with the magnet-on-a-stick, and kept flushing and removing scale until no more scale came out.

Step 4 meant cutting the blanks out of Teflon sheet until they were just the right size to go in the holes in the head gasket.  The Teflon blanks are bigger than the water jacket holes, so they'll stay sandwiched between block and head.  And yes, the Teflon sheet is thinner than a head gasket.

Step 4a: Repaint sump where four years of coolant dribbling out the overflow stripped the paint off.

The only other, minor fix was to replace my rocker gear with another, nearly new set, so that number 1 rocker, valve and pushrod are lubricated properly.

Boxing Day.  J-series engine in test stand, after cooling system fix.  No thermostat. 23 degrees ambient.

Top Tank: 63 (i.e. ambient + 40)
Bottom Tank: 64 (i.e. ambient + 40)
Rear cyl head: 67 (i.e. ambient + 45)
Front cyl head: 69 (i.e. ambient + 45)

This is very encouraging.  With the motor back in the car after Christmas, on a stinking-hot day (29/12) I took off up the M1, and tried keeping up with the trucks from the Hawkesbury River bridge uphill to the Mt White exit.  At Mt White, maybe 35 degrees, still no thermostat, tap water only -

Top Tank: 85 (i.e. ambient + 50)
Bottom Tank: 80 (i.e. ambient + 45)
Rear cyl head: 88 (i.e. ambient + 55)
Front cyl head: 90 (i.e. ambient + 55)

Call me foolish, but I took the radiator cap off.  Just the slightest "fshh" when I got to the first stop, and that was all.  When I got back home, say 30 degrees ambient,

Top Tank: 75 (i.e. ambient + 45)
Bottom Tank: 69 (i.e. ambient + 40)
Rear cyl head: 83 (i.e. ambient + 55)
Front cyl head: 84 (i.e. ambient + 55)

No coolant loss, even though the radiator was 1/2" below full.  Compared with last July, the cooling system fix means that the coolant temperature inside the engine is only say five degrees hotter; and the ambient temperature was nearly fifteen degrees higher.

Next step is to put the thermostat back in, and if things are satisfactory, drain and refill the cooling system with coolant.  And just to be on the safe side, I should go find a radiator place which is prepared to take the tanks off and clean the core out.

Postscript: the FC's previous owner finally admitted to me that if he drove it at more than 40 mph on long trips, it'd overheat.

Rob


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: mcl1959 on January 07, 2017, 01:51:56 PM
This is a very informative post Rob, and I am thoroughly enjoying it. I too have had one of those motors that just Continuously overheats on long trips.
I think the fix is excellent and could be very useful.
Do you have a theory why some motors run hot and others not?

Plenty of engines give the impression they are running hot when the temp light flicks on, but the radiator is not boiling. This is usually caused by having the wrong temp sender in the engine.

Also rebored motors usually run hotter than unbored ones due to reduced wall thickness around cylinders

Ken


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Errol62 on January 07, 2017, 04:10:07 PM
Great stuff Rob. As Ken says my 192 always ran hot at speed despite a three core HR radiator. Replaced with a standard bore 202 and the smiths temp gauge in the head sat rock solid on 82C. 82C thermostat fitted.


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Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: ardiesse on January 07, 2017, 06:05:16 PM
Ken,

As to why some motors overheat and some don't, I'm still in the dark.  My FC's J-series motor is the only stubborn example I've found, as against two earlies and three B-series motors that run quite cool, although my 48 needs to be driven with one eye on the temperature gauge on a 38+ degree day.  I wonder . . . did GM increase the wall thickness of the block and head castings when the EJ came out?  Something inside the block is impeding water flow to the back of the motor, and so it finds the easy way, which is the short path in front of number 1 cylinder.  Was the release of head gasket 7424869 just before (or even after) the end of grey motor production a tacit admission by GM that some design change for the J motors had bad consequences for cooling?  But then I remember the stories friends told me about going on family holidays in Hydramatic station wagons . . . The last thing a Holden cooling system needs is the extra heat load of an automatic transmission oil cooler.

And I will (respectfully) disagree with you on the rebored motor running hotter theory:

1: My "test" 3-3/16 bore motor ran cooler in its "natural" state than my FC's 3-1/8 bore motor.  With the cylinder heads off both, I noticed that the 3-3/16 bore motor was easier to turn over by hand, and so I'm not surprised that it runs a bit cooler.
2: Thermodynamic considerations.  The fuel's calorific content can only emerge in three places - at the crankshaft hub as useful work, out the exhaust as heat, and out of the cooling system as heat (neglecting  direct thermal transfer from motor to surroundings).  The only way that thicker cylinder walls could impede heat transfer is if they had quite significant thermal resistance, which would imply high temperature gradients in the cast iron.

One of the guys in the 48&FJ club put a reconditioned motor in his 50-series ute about ten years back.  And the reco motor was a chronic overheater.  He reverse-flushed the cooling system, replaced the thermostat, checked the calibration of his temperature gauge, re-cored the radiator, checked the motor for leaking valves, compression-tested it.  On a summer's day, it would boil over.  Like clockwork.  In desperation he pulled the water pump out and checked the clearance between the impeller and the pump body.  He ran out of feeler gauges at 70 thou, and they were still a loose fit.  He replaced the water pump with one of correct clearances, and all his overheating troubles vanished.

He's still annoyed that it took him nearly ten years to work out what was wrong.

Errol: My experience of red motors is that they only overheat for good reason, either component failure, or that the radiator's completely blocked with rust scale.  Mind you, I'm suspicious of the pressed-sheet-metal impellers on red/blue/black water pumps these days.

Rob


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: mcl1959 on January 07, 2017, 07:55:17 PM
Good point Rob, I guess your title of "black art" is quite apt. :P

I've never had success with rebored motors cooling wise and all my original motors have been fantastic.
I'll have to come up with another theory. ::)

Ken


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Harv on January 11, 2017, 07:19:26 AM
G'day Rob,

Very cool post  ;D. I appreciate the science being put into understanding how the grey is working.

Oxalic acid is funky stuff. I used some many years ago to remove heavy watermarks from a rosewood coffee table. Wonder I didn't poison myself.

If I read the post right, the standard 2017 aftermarket head gaskets for grey motors are of the early type (too many holes), but can be converted to super-dooper late EJ ones (better coolant flow) by using the Teflon plugs, and some careful cylinder head drilling? Methinks there may be a market for those Teflon plugs  :D. I'm thinking this might be just the trick for my meth monster project.

One of the common lumpy humpy tricks was to tap the cylinder head , and run two extra coolant pipes back to spread the cooling load out across the cylinder head. I wonder if this is where GMH got the idea from? I'd love to see this done on your test motor, and see how it compares with the thermocouples to the super-dooper EJ gasket.

Cheers,
Harv


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: ardiesse on January 11, 2017, 10:59:29 AM
Harv,

Why thank you . . .

I can better understand the lumpy humpy trick of drilling the head and making a "coolant manifold" now.  It'd tend to equalise the flow of coolant inside the head, and perhaps most importantly, minimise the average path length that coolant would take between entering and exiting the cylinder head.  Are the holes generally drilled above the 2-3 and 4-5 exhaust ports?

To the best of my (scanty) knowledge, the modified head gasket 7424869 was never used in production.  I think it was one of those "hidden knowledge" things that Holden dealers had up their sleeves to fix overheating and cracked heads in near-new Holdens.  Coincidentally, when I got to Ceduna in 2012 with an overheating car, the guy in the next-door motel room had done his apprenticeship at a Holden dealer in the early '60s.  He said that there was a fix for the J-series motors involving drilling out passages and a different head gasket.  First I'd heard of it.

Yes, you're right.  You can fake the modified head gasket with the Teflon plugs, but you also need to take a drill to the head and block as per the fitting instructions.  For your meth monster, I'd suggest this cooling system fix as a minimum.  For a stock motor, it may not be strictly necessary to drill the passages out.  Blanking off the holes alone may be sufficient.  That's the idea I get from doing the fix on my "test" motor.

The original head gaskets were the double-shim asbestos sandwich type.  The 7424869s are of the same construction as the 2017 aftermarket head gaskets.  Which makes me wonder . . .  Rather than doing all the fiddly work with sheet Teflon and scissors, maybe one could go to the gasket manufacturer (AA Gaskets in Melbourne)with a normal grey head gasket and a 7424869 and say, "I'd like to get a special run of head gaskets made with these twelve punch dies removed."  It's just a question of cost and minimum production quantities after that.

Rob


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Old_Mt_Isa_Boy on January 11, 2017, 11:18:26 AM
Might be worth asking the cost at least. Maybe Pete has an idea?

Regards

Wayne b


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: hsv-001 on January 11, 2017, 06:32:51 PM
My older brother used external oil filter and transmission coolers behind his front spoiler on a fibre glass flip front FJ that was bored to 3 1/4 back in the day ,and I think it helped . Cheers Haydn


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Maco on January 11, 2017, 08:15:12 PM
An interesting & great read Rob.


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: graham_fuller on January 11, 2017, 10:22:17 PM
Yes Rob very informative. Thanks
Cheers,
Graham


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Harv on January 12, 2017, 01:03:08 PM
I can better understand the lumpy humpy trick of drilling the head and making a "coolant manifold" now.  It'd tend to equalise the flow of coolant inside the head, and perhaps most importantly, minimise the average path length that coolant would take between entering and exiting the cylinder head.  Are the holes generally drilled above the 2-3 and 4-5 exhaust ports?

In the photo below (sorry about the link), the middle photo shows an unbranded finned upper thermostat blanking plate to suit the Holden grey motor. These blanking plates replace the upper thermostat cover, preventing water flowing out of the cylinder head. These were used in conjunction with drilling two or three holes in the cylinder head top surface, down to the water jacket. The holes are tapped, and piping connected to the tappings. With the thermostat cover blanked off, water now flows through the two/three tappings back to the radiator instead of via the thermostat cover.
http://s929.photobucket.com/user/V8EKwagon/media/7_zpsj1wle0lh.jpg.html
More discussion on it here:https://www.fxfjholden.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=37&t=2470&p=19493&hilit=humpy+still+racing+cooling&sid=482e6f34dca38638baea1da11d08499e#p19493

To the best of my (scanty) knowledge, the modified head gasket 7424869 was never used in production.  I think it was one of those "hidden knowledge" things that Holden dealers had up their sleeves to fix overheating and cracked heads in near-new Holdens.  Coincidentally, when I got to Ceduna in 2012 with an overheating car, the guy in the next-door motel room had done his apprenticeship at a Holden dealer in the early '60s.  He said that there was a fix for the J-series motors involving drilling out passages and a different head gasket.  First I'd heard of it.

I need to talk to Dad... he was a GMH mechanic around that time. Wonder if he knows about this one?

Rather than doing all the fiddly work with sheet Teflon and scissors, maybe one could go to the gasket manufacturer (AA Gaskets in Melbourne)with a normal grey head gasket and a 7424869 and say, "I'd like to get a special run of head gaskets made with these twelve punch dies removed."  It's just a question of cost and minimum production quantities after that.

I'd be interested in doing that, or at least approaching AA Gaskets... fancy lending me a 7424869 ;D?

Cheers,
Harv


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: zulu on January 12, 2017, 11:01:50 PM
Harv,

Pretty sure I have a NOS 7424869 in the shed, you are welcome to a loan of it and depending on the price of the gaskets, I may be interested in 1 or 2

Gary


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Harv on January 13, 2017, 07:16:25 AM
Thanks Gary - appreciated.

I'll make some calls next week and get a rough idea on pricing.

Cheers,
Harv


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: KFH on January 13, 2017, 09:41:11 AM
Harv.  Depending on price I would be interested in one or two as well if it is possible to get them made.

Keith


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Old_Mt_Isa_Boy on January 13, 2017, 12:12:00 PM

SPECIAL DUTY CYLINDER HEAD GASKET
FOR HOLDENS, PRIOR
TO 'EJ', OPERATING
UNDER ARDUOUS CONDITIONS
A revised type cylinder head gasket is now available from NASCO Distributors for use on 48J21 5 up to 'EK' Holden vehicles that are continually operating at high speeds or under conditions where severe operating temperatures are experienced. The purpose of this new gasket is to direct a greater flow of cooler water to the rear of the engine. To achieve this, a number of cooling holes in the cylinder head and block are blanked off by the gasket, while the two rear holes are increased in size. This new cylinder head gasket is now available from all NASCO Distributors.
PART No. • 7424869
LIST PRICE £0 18 0 plus tax

Found this on the net.


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Old_Mt_Isa_Boy on January 13, 2017, 12:26:40 PM
The actual ad.

(http://i878.photobucket.com/albums/ab350/wayne9606/FE-FC%20Uploads/Modified%20Gasket%20PART%20No%207424869_zpsw5kt8dtu.jpg) ($2)


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: mcl1959 on January 13, 2017, 02:06:36 PM
This is from the July 1963 GMH service bulletin

(https://s27.postimg.org/drugyhq1r/image.jpg) ($2)

(https://s27.postimg.org/8ugwddo2n/image.jpg) ($2)

Ken


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Harv on January 13, 2017, 02:55:16 PM
Thanks gents - appreciated.

I've sent a query to AA Gaskets - I'll let you know how I go. If there is a minimum run number, I'll call for expressions of interest.

Cheers,
Harv


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: DJ on January 13, 2017, 04:17:14 PM
What an interesting & informative post.
Thanks for the collection of experiences gents.
Looking forward to a reply from AA Gaskets Harv.


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Old_Mt_Isa_Boy on January 13, 2017, 07:16:31 PM
Hopefully you get a quick response Harv, I could do with one now. Have the engine out at the moment.

Regards

Wayne b


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Maco on January 13, 2017, 10:06:34 PM
I will have one too please Harv.

Cheers
John


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Harv on January 14, 2017, 07:34:40 AM
I got a very quick response from AA Gaskets. They are more than happy to make the gaskets, using non-asbestos material 1.4mm thick (+/- 5%), and silicone coated. Lead time is 6-8 weeks to allow for retooling. The finished gaskets are a reasonable price ($40), though we would also need to cover the cost of the tooling changes ($800-$1500). They need a minimum order of 50 gaskets, so if I spread the $1500 tooling cost out over 50 gaskets, the cost would be $70 per gasket. As a sense check, a standard head gasket from eBay is $35-60, depending on quality (the AA Gasket type quality is around the $60 mark).

So the long and the short of it is that I need to find about 50 people willing to pay $70 per gasket for better cooling. Say another $10 for postage.

I'm happy to act as the focal point for this one, similar to what I did with the hydramatic service kits. I'll raise a separate post on each of the FX/FJ, FE/FC, FB/EK and EJ/EH forums, calling for nominations on who wants a gasket. I'm not doing FaceBook (me and FaceBook don't talk), but happy if anyone wants to spruik a link to the forums. I'll let the nominations run for two weeks (end of January), and hope we get 50 nominations. I assume some blokes will want two or three, and I'll probably take 5-10 (some for me, and some for the inevitable latecomers  ::)). Provided we get 50, I'll place the order then manage the distribution. Not sure how I'll post these out without them getting bent... need some advice here please. If someone can scan me up a good copy of the GMH Service Bulletin, I'll include a print of that too in each parcel.

Righto, time to make some nomination postings  ;D.

Cheers,
Harv


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Fraze on January 14, 2017, 07:55:44 AM
I'll take one thanks, Fraze


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Harv on January 14, 2017, 10:30:57 AM
No problem Fraze. Please post to the thread in the "for sale" section, and PM me your details.

Cheers,
Harv


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: ardiesse on January 15, 2017, 08:55:29 PM
Harv,

Thanks for moving so quickly. Good news that AA Gaskets are co-operative.  I'll pm you . . .

Rob


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: ardiesse on January 15, 2017, 09:16:48 PM
Next Instalment:

I got in touch with Renner Radiators in Fyshwick last week, and asked them whether they'd take the tanks off my radiator and clean the tubes out . . .   No problem, they said.  OK, I live in Sydney, so why am I going to a radiator place in Canberra?  For a start, Renner Radiators do all the work on the National Museum's historic vehicles, and they came highly recommended on the Forum.  Also, I was going down to Canberra last weekend (actually, just got back a few hours ago), so it was no trouble for me to take the FC's radiator, and a festy, but basically sound radiator that came out of an EK "shooting landau" at Parkes.

Same day service.  $140 each, including repair of a couple of weeping leaks on the FC's radiator.

I asked if my oxalic-acid bath and home-reverse-flush actually did anything.  Maybe, but nowhere nearly enough.  "Pretty dirty inside."

Once I got home, I installed my newly serviced radiator, with (hint) the toe-end of panty hose in the top radiator hose fitting to act as a scale filter.

And I repeated the St Ives run from last July.  Ambient temperature: 25 degrees.

Top tank: 63 (i.e. ambient + 40)
Bottom Tank: 59 (i.e. ambient + 35)
Rear cyl head: 68 (i.e. ambient + 45)
Front cyl head: 70 (i.e. ambient + 45)

The radiator temperatures are the same, relative to ambient.  But the coolant temperatures inside the cylinder head have been lowered 15 degrees, and are now much closer to the temperature of the top tank.

When I got home,

Top tank: 63 (i.e. ambient + 40)
Bottom Tank: 57 (i.e. ambient + 35)
Rear cyl head: 66 (i.e. ambient + 40)
Front cyl head: 67 (i.e. ambient + 40)

These are the sort of numbers I got with a motor idling in a test stand, after I did the Teflon cure.  Does having your radiator professionally cleaned out make a difference?  Shit yeah.  Best $140 I've spent in a good while.

Rob


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Harv on January 16, 2017, 07:18:54 AM
and a festy, but basically sound radiator that came out of an EK "shooting landau" at Parkes.
The "shooting landau" is an official GMH Rural Division body style  ;D. Sometimes confused with the Cow Feed Carrier and Paddock Basher variants.

Does having your radiator professionally cleaned out make a difference?  Shit yeah.
Agree. When I bought the FB, it had a relatively new radiator in it. I dropped the water and flushed the hell out of the block and radiator. Ran OK around town, but under load (trailer on the freeway) the temperature light would flicker on. Had the radiator cleaned out by PJ Radiators in Tamworth, and never missed a beat since.

Cheers,
Harv


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: Old_Mt_Isa_Boy on January 16, 2017, 02:21:59 PM
So I have the engine out and was thinking of drilling the water jackets bigger while it was out. What is the consensus of then putting the head back on and waiting for the new gasket to arrive. No other changes and keep driving the car.

Regards

Wayne b


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: ardiesse on January 16, 2017, 02:37:01 PM
Wayne,

If you want to get the car back on the road before (say) April, your best option may be to make up the blanks and use them with a standard head gasket.  I used 1 mm Teflon sheet because we had some at work.  I don't know about brass or copper (would the cast iron act as a sacrificial anode?).  Perhaps stainless steel?  It's pretty hard to work with though.

Rob


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: RET on January 17, 2017, 05:05:35 PM
Here's the reference to it from the Master Parts Catalogue, for what it's worth:

(http://i.imgur.com/jEqTVrj.jpg)

Given the reference to "Special Service - Enlarged rear water ports", I'm really interested to know what the impact of using this head gasket on an engine where the rear holes weren't enlarged. Rob, you mentioned that you only did the 7/16" modification. What are your thoughts?


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: ardiesse on January 18, 2017, 10:24:37 AM
Richard,

On my "test" motor, I only drilled the small hole out, to 7/16", mostly because I didn't have a 5/8" drill at the time.
On the FC's motor, I drilled both holes out as detailed in the fitting instructions for the gasket.

Even with just the small hole drilled out, the coolant temperature inside the head was lowered 10 degrees C.
Which makes me think that most of the benefit from fitting the modified head gasket comes from blanking off the holes in front of number 1 cylinder.  But drilling out the holes behind number 6 would work as added insurance, if you follow me.

Oh, and the "enlarged rear water ports" applies only to the head gasket compared to a standard one.  Interestingly, the No.1/No.6 water jacket holes in a standard, OEM head gasket (7416667) are 7/16" and 5/8" diameter.

I reckon that you could fit a 7424869 to an unaltered engine and still derive a large benefit from reduced coolant temperatures inside the motor.

Anybody willing to give it a try?  I could even make up a set of Teflon blanks and mail them to an intrepid volunteer.

Rob

P.S. so by 1967 Holden was carrying four different types of red motor head gasket?


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: mcl1959 on January 18, 2017, 03:16:12 PM
I think you're right Rob that just fitting the improved head gasket would lower the engine temperature. Enlarging the holes probably provides for a greater flow of water to compensate for the restrictions in other areas. Otherwise the radiator may be being asked to do more than it is capable.
You would like to think that GMH did this test and found that enlarging the rear holes gave better results than not enlarging the rear holes.
Ken


Title: Re: The black art of cooling grey motors
Post by: ardiesse on January 27, 2017, 10:18:16 PM
Australia Day Update:

I put a 160 deg. F thermostat in the cooling system and followed maco's advice to drill a couple of 1/8" holes in the thermostat body.  Took the car for a cruise out along Mona Vale Road.  At a servo at Newport -

Top tank: 63 (i.e. ambient + 40)
Bottom Tank: 47 (i.e. ambient + 25)
Rear cyl head: 71
Front cyl head: 73

160 F is 69 C, so the thermostat's regulating the temperature perfectly.  The servo at Newport is at the bottom of a long downhill run on Barrenjoey Rd, which would be why the bottom radiator tank temperature is so low.

One unintended consequence of getting the radiator cleaned out - a very slow weep has started from one of the tubes.  Maybe it'll seal itself with calcium deposits over time . . .

Rob