Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

In your opinion the oil is not the problem. It may or may not be be but a change could be the solution. I am getting the impression that there are at least two problems - dirty lifters and wrong oil. Short of disassembling the lifters and cleaning them you could try a very thin diesel rated oil. Put some km on it (not on a track) in the hope it will clean things up a little. Then replace it with a quality synthetic lower than 10W 60.

Got around to pulling the four studs, arp studs are 11mm std bolts are 10mm and the channel is 11,5mm so there has only been 0,25mm around the arp stud to feed oil to the lifters ..... in my book not much... i have hammered the engine and slaugthered a set of tires ,,,, you know what ..... no ticking at all ! So much work and money for gaskets, oil, filters, oilpump and head wasted because of stud opgrade ........

Btw i cant run a racecar on the streets here in DK. Even if it could be fun

ive used 24L of oil in the last couple of month and gotten 3 track laps out of it .... oil might not be dirty ;-)

if you cant do it right dont do it at all and dont quick fix .... it will end in tears !

so now im sending my head to the machine shop to have the channels bored up

This doesn't make sense to me, if the problem was due to using ARP head studs then pretty much every person with an RB25 using them would be having this problem.

EDIT: I thought i would do some calculations on cross sectional area according to your measurements.

Two stock 2mm oil restrictors (which i assume you have) have a total cross section of 6.28mm2 and from your 11mm stud in 11.5mm hole measurment the total cross section of area for oil for both studs is 17.66mm2. It doesn't add up.

Edited by Dobz

Factory RB25 headbolts have a M11 thread on them, though they do have a reduced shank (down to 10mm), though from memory the ARP studs are also slightly reduced, I dont think they are bang on 11mm OD. Even being 0.1-0.2mm undersize is going to increase the CSA substantially and also the supply oil flow potential, however it seems the block restrictors are the biggest inhibitor of flow, not your head stud hole clearance.

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

    • Hey everyone. Is there a way I can get the original window sticker (maroney label) for my 1995 R33 GTST? I doubt I’ll be able to ever get it but it’s worth a shot to ask
    • Have a vb in honour of the car comming back
    • It was a great, but typical track day, and some VB was ingested at the night time debrief 🤪
    • And so, to round this out, I couldn't be happier to confirm @MBS206 has decided to buy the car. He drove down from sunny QLD with a trailer last week and it is off to its new home today. I'll let Matt confirm on next steps but I understand broadly that the plan is to leave it pretty much as is, and just get some quality wheel time with a nicely balanced car that is pretty much track ready. There are a few a jobs still to be done first but nothing too major and I think its a very smart buy Dinner last night at the Paragon with a round of VBs (mostly) for Neil
    • Well, 50 pages and the end of a chapter for this car. We took it out for a shakedown at Wakie yesterday, and everything went well. There were a couple of niggles: - Oil cooler fitting leak - tightened, cleaned, stopped leaking - Radiator cap overflow fitting was leaking....Mark called it, the overflow fitting was threaded in and not tight....tightened, tested and held pressure - Small oil leak at the rear of the block, probably the turbo oil feed - too hot to get at it comfortably but probably just needs to be nipped up - leak at the driver's side rear brake line where it meets the hardline. Fitting wasn't loose, so Matt backed it off and back on, no further leaks - there's also a leak somewhere on the top of the fuel tank, maybe that cross over fuel line - that was has been left to fix when its on a hoist Otherwise than those niggles the car went great, turned great and stopped great so it was a very successful day out. I'm always really nervous when a car first hits the track after a long break, especially with a brand new engine as well but it was great. VID-20251011-WA0007.mp4  Big thanks to @The Bogan who dropped by and helped out, @MBS206 and my nephew Lachlan the apprentice.  Neil's wife Mel also surprised the hell out of all of us by dropping by; she's up in Tamworth these days but was travelling to Melbourne so had plausible deniability for turning up at the garage, it was great to see her but also obviously a bit sad all round.
×
×
  • Create New...