
Originally Posted by
BigKriss
I've got a metal rule, new head bolts and new head gasket set. I don't want to machine the cylinder head flat as it was done around 40,000kms ago, (don't want to spend the money) but i will if it's warped, becasue it has over heated quite a few times (10+ times in the last 2 years). i'm losing coolant and I don't know where from. I've replaced the fan clutch and thermostat with no luck. a recent blown
headgasket check and a leak in the coolant system at 1 bar did not reveal anything.
any comments appreciated before i do this job. robin535's recent thread on the job was informative so was George M's comments in the same thread.

!
I'm by no means an expert but here are the mistakes I recently made... 
1) Try to locate the cam gear with respect to the head before you loosen the timing chain, making sure of course that the O/T mark on the big pulley and the line on the block are lined up. I thought I could just mark which chain link went with which tooth, but then the chain slipped off the lower gear when I was rotating the bottom end to and fro to get the pistons to the top for cleaning. Luckily the cam was still in the same position so I could go back and make alignment marks from the cam to the head.
2) After you drain the coolant from the radiator, actually do what Bentley's says and drain it from the block too. I thought the one would be good enough, but when you break the seal all the coolant in the head pours into your cylinders and oil passages, not to mention across the garage floor and out onto the driveway.
3) Before you do anything in the engine, pull it up on ramps and take off the metal heat shields that block access to the header bolts. Take the 4, 12mm (deep socket) copper nuts off the down pipes... do a 1/4 turn tighter first to break the seal then back them off. Then take the car off the ramps so you can get to the head without a step stool. The step in Bentley's where it says to disconnect the exhaust is after the engine is already out of commission, so I couldn't get easy access to the copper exhaust nuts and had to pull them from above, not an easy thing to do!
Otherwise the steps in the manual were pretty much all there was to it. I left the intake on and took the exhaust off, but still needed to separate the downpipes from the headers to get the head to come off with ease. And you read the whole saga about how to lift the head. Not real heavy but awkward, and not much leverage leaning over a fender.
HTH
- Robin
Robin
72 Chevy K10
01 E39 M5