Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

So i recently purchased an m35, knowing it had an overheating issue. I knew it would 99% be headgasket blown! Only 70km on the clock.

Thankfully the motor looks on great nic on the inside! I was also happy to note that the coolant didnt blow through into the oil galleries - which has made the repair job much easier!!!

These things are built tough, ive played with vq35's a hell of a lot previously and RB's. I am falling in love with the design of these motors. Thick sleeves, large coolant volumes around the sleeves which the 3.5 block doesn't have. Good pistons.

That centre blanking cap in the middle of the valley I think is used for a coolant control valve in the US market? Inside mine looks to have boiled under there and acted as a small air lock. I'm going to link from here and the factory bleeder valve to a bubble tank - hopefully alleviating air lock issues in the future!

post-137370-0-13526200-1414895316_thumb.jpg

post-137370-0-77462300-1414895338_thumb.jpg

post-137370-0-31803800-1414895362_thumb.jpg

post-137370-0-78595100-1414895385_thumb.jpg

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/450283-dreaded-vq25det-headgasket/
Share on other sites

Scotty_m35 makes a bolt up coolant mod that works similar to the us version and also has a nice bleed valve added in. We'll wprth the investment

Any pics or links to the system he uses? I am just about to order an fittings and weld ons.....

Any pics or links to the system he uses? I am just about to order an fittings and weld ons.....

Search the forum for scotty's m35 coolant mod.

Pretty reasonably priced for the product and the quality of his workmanship.

Also Google scotty's customs. He has a website and produces a lot of bolt on m35 parts that are proven to produce the goods.

Also look at his dump pipe, it's the best there is

Oh, to answer the question on the extra coolant gallery, it was a feature on some of the other motors in some of the other motors inthe VQ range, that part of the "towing package" would feature an additional coolant passage with separate thermostat.

Here are the parts :)

http://www.z1motorsports.com/350_g35/product_info.php?products_id=3011

Good job opening it up, and sorting out the issue btw.

Except those parts won't fit the M35. ;)

Overheating doesn't mean the head gasket is gone in these, so anyone reading this later, check you have properly bled the cooling system, or fit my coolant mod kit before ripping the engine out. Please. It will save you a lot of headaches.

  • Like 1

Definitely not, plus the outlet pipe to the radiator is completely different.

No idea why you would need another two thermostats either, just another part to fail.

My kit uses the heater line to bypass coolant from the block, rather than relying on the one small pipe at the back of the engine. It also replaces the plastic bleed assembly with alloy which is another common failure point.

Except those parts won't fit the M35. ;)

Overheating doesn't mean the head gasket is gone in these, so anyone reading this later, check you have properly bled the cooling system, or fit my coolant mod kit before ripping the engine out. Please. It will save you a lot of headaches.

Correct! However - these being open deck - often will warp the heads. The whole VQ range from my experience does not suffer to well under heat - ive seen them where they even warp through the cam tunnels!!!

Of course i didnt just take a punt - i knew it was head gasket before ripping it out.....

Often? I've had mine at 150C at the track on many occasions, it never lifted or warped the heads, even at 40psi up the straight... Being alloy block changes things, as the expansion rates are similar, unlike iron block/alloy heads.

If the heads are warping that bad there is an airlock causing no coolant to flow, which is the common VQ fault I tried to alleviate with my coolant mod design. As the bore and heads overheat they cause flash boiling which exacerbates the problem.

Often? I've had mine at 150C at the track on many occasions, it never lifted or warped the heads, even at 40psi up the straight... Being alloy block changes things, as the expansion rates are similar, unlike iron block/alloy heads.

If the heads are warping that bad there is an airlock causing no coolant to flow, which is the common VQ fault I tried to alleviate with my coolant mod design. As the bore and heads overheat they cause flash boiling which exacerbates the problem.

Well when you are running ARP head studs i would hope you don't have issues!!! FYI i've gone back to OEM studs - ditched the angular torque and run my own torque values (105NM final value). Angular torque on a used block is a waste of time and generally ends in uneven torque values.

The issues with OEM bolts and open deck comes down to contact surface area. Nothing to do with iron alloy mixes....that wasn't even on the pallet for discussion haha. Like you say - flash boils - but the residual heat in the open deck decreases the dynamic torque of the studs and allows warping and reduced pressure between bolt spreads. When the pressure between the cylinders lifts obviously they blow through. I have never actually seen a VQ blow through on the outside of the open deck and lift to an adjoining oil passage - always happens middle of block between coolant chambers.

I've blanked off my radiator cap. Fitted my own bubble tank with the pressure cap, teed off from turbo water feed (base of turbo), centre of valley, teed off top of thermostat and bridged and removed OEM plastic bleeder.

I must say however I do prefer the VQ25 block over the same era VQ35 blocks. These blocks are much more boost friendly with a thicker sleeve and larger volume coolant chambers surrounding the sleeves. Also the OEm metal gaskets are very good - however I don't like they fact they pre coat them with the teflon/graphite mix. I threw mine in the light costic wash for a few hours to get rid of the coating :)

Edited by DMM

Could you give the reasoning behind not wanting to use angle torque on a used block?

It is my understanding that angle is used to remove the error caused by varying amounts of friction acting on the thread, interfering with the actual clamp load and stretch of the bolt.

How does the block being used negatively affect that?

I only fitted the ARP's after running unlimited boost, lifting a head. I also ran the car hard for a year before the head gasket finally let go in a big way on the dyno. Like you say the extra meat of the bore is what helps us VQ25 guys, comparing it to the VQ35 is silly, they are very different as you have found.

OEM gaskets here, with extra Hylomar spray. 105nm sounds like a lot on stock bolts...they will have twisted nicely. Did you lube the threads at least, and clean the threads in the block?

Could you give the reasoning behind not wanting to use angle torque on a used block?

It is my understanding that angle is used to remove the error caused by varying amounts of friction acting on the thread, interfering with the actual clamp load and stretch of the bolt.

How does the block being used negatively affect that?

Ive found in the past angular torque stretches the block threads heavily. There have been some situations where a customer has requested a certain bolt with angular torque and it pulls the thread. The only way i've found against this is using helicoils to increase thread depth contact area. Mathematically when you use stretched alloy the thread bolt only touches around 60% of possible mating thread in the block.

If it was all brand new then nothing wrong with angular as yes you are right - helps eliminate error.

I only fitted the ARP's after running unlimited boost, lifting a head. I also ran the car hard for a year before the head gasket finally let go in a big way on the dyno. Like you say the extra meat of the bore is what helps us VQ25 guys, comparing it to the VQ35 is silly, they are very different as you have found.

OEM gaskets here, with extra Hylomar spray. 105nm sounds like a lot on stock bolts...they will have twisted nicely. Did you lube the threads at least, and clean the threads in the block?

No twist - prepared in layers. Cleaned and oiled of course. Process as follows:

1)Spun bolts in and out 3 times to distribute oil evenly and wipe off excess after each spin.

2)Check block temp - anything over 25degree at 0.15% NM for every 1 degree over 25.

3) Torque all bolts to 65NM. Let gasket squish and settle.

4) Torque to 90NM - let set over night

5) Release bolts, remove and check oil coverage. You will see ghost marks on bolts if oil coverage is poor, otherwise will have nice even moist look.

6) Nip to 90NM again - just touch 90, no need for high tension load.

7)Torque to 105NM and finished.

No bolt groan, no binding, no twisting process! Used this many time over the years on RB, SR and VQ engines. A lot have seen the loads of bathurst etc without engine failure.

It won't matter how tight the bolts are done if you don't fix the coolant issue. Surely you would have known about that with your VQ racing expertise?

I chose to do my bolt tensions that way to reduce twist or shift. Not to stop a head gasket from lifting. Gaskets are designed by nature to be the weak point.

Coolant issue is as you have said - failure to flow out the back of the block/heads. The two passages out of the rear of the heads are tiny and restricted from flow heavily. This is why is I'm adopting the centre relief in the valley to help with flow.

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

    • Nice, thanks for sharing your progress....that's a pretty long list you are putting into it!
    • Decided to upgrade my pressurised plastic coolant expansion tank for a fancy pants alloy version The OEM versions can get brittle, even the new plastic one I got when I first got the car is a starting to show signs of "stress" I wasn't cheap, but it is basically unbreakable
    • Morning all, I have an RB25DET Neo that's in need of a rebuild. Will need new pistons etc due to detonation damage. Would anyone be able to recommend a shop in Southeast Queensland who I could bring my long motor to for a rebuild? Just want someone who knows RBs and whos built a bunch of them before. TLDR - recommended engine shops for RB rebuild.
    • Gday Thought it was about time I started a build thread! As expected this project has snowballed into a huge financial liability, but unless you’re strong willed and responsible, it’s not a surprise. Background -  My first turbo car was an R32 GTS-4, got my full license and then totalled my Au Falcon a week later, so while trying to sell my RMZ450 dirtbike to buy another car a bloke offered to swap the R32 which at the time I felt like I was ripped off but looking back and seeing prices of those now ($40kish) it was a good deal, I didn’t know enough about these cars to appreciate what I had so sold it before the RB20 blew up. Between here and there, out of 12 cars I’ve owned the note worthy ones are a V8 Lexus SC400 (soarer), a couple of XR6 Turbos and my beloved S15 which I had for about 3 years, picked it up for $12500, repairable write off but she was fine, gun metal grey/pewter and bone stock/unmolested until I got my hands on it. Ended up spending about the value of the car and 280kw, 2 demerit points by the time I got defected and sold it for $14500 (also $40kish in today’s market, rip) Fast forward to the present day, I’m in a much better position financially and daily an MQ Triton (great cars, pipe down Ranger Bois), I cruised marketplace and car sales for a few months looking for another R32, the best deal I could find was an absolute rust bucket half finished project for $12000, until this R33 popped up in Port Macquarie for $18k - unregistered and barely running but decent shape, kept an eye on it for a few weeks and the price steadily dropped, $16k then $15k then $14k, that was the point where I was like shit someone’s gonna snatch this up! It was owned by a young bloke who had big plans but him and his missus just had a baby so smartest move financially for them but big gain for me. So 2 days later I’m towing a car trailer to pick this thing up. Roughly 2 weeks and $3500 later I’m cruising around Newcastle in my beat up R33 all smiles and dose noises! It only needed some basic shit to get it going, coil packs and air flow meter, electrical stuff and all fluids changed, 158k kms and running pretty good, nice smooth engine after oil and coolant flush - when I say coolant I mean it had been filled up with tap water, every gallery and heater element was filled with rust, 8-9 flushes later and still had brown liquid coming out but she’ll be right. The car was painted R34 Bayside Blue at some point but whether it was a cheap job or just not looked after is anyone’s guess, clear coat flaking like sausage roll.  Was rethinking my choices and contemplating life, had it up for sale for $22k - still cheaper than any registered R33 but got little interest, next minute I had an opportunity at work - 6 months overseas for good money, so that was a no brainer, fast forward again and here we are with a 50% finished project. Current Mods - 200ish KW according to butt dyno Was tuned with Apexi PowerFC EBC (old school Greddy Profec)  Stock turbo (more shaft play than a Tinder date gone right) 3inch turbo back Varex muffler  Aftermarket injectors of mystery size, Power FC showed 36% duty cycle at full boost so not behd good size Someone had good intentions but stuck with the stock R33 MAF so we had misfires at 6000rpm due to the MAF hitting 5.2V So far I’ve redone the entire interior with carpet form Car Mats Direct, new Seats and steering wheel from Autotechnica, also sound system by Autobarn (mainly Kicker) Also MCA pro comfort coil overs - Hands down best purchase yet, worlds of improvement over the tired 30yrold shocks Goals - 450kw/600hp on flex tune New paint job - Midnight Purple 2 Engine is at the shop getting rebuilt with forged rods a pistons, new valves and springs, ATI Harmonic balancer, Aeroflow 7.5L sump, rear head drain and oil restrictors as per oil control thread* and cam covers modded for larger breathers, other stuff I can’t recall of the top of my head Parts purchased and to be installed once the engine is done -  Engine loom from Wiring Specialties including these options: Haltech Nexus S3 R35 Coil pack conversion  PRP Dual Trigger kit Fan controller  Other Parts -  262 Kelford Cams Turbo - Hypergear ATR43SS3-ProS with T51R mod (whistly boi) 6 boost manifold (high mount) 50mm Turbosmart Pro gate (plumbed back for legal reasons) HKS Super Turbo Exhaust with High Flow Cat Custom 3.5inch dump and front pipe 1500cc Bosch injectors  Fuel Pump walbro 525 Haltech MAP and IAT sensors Haltech Flex Sensor Fenix Radiator with dual thermo fans LS1 Alternator Kit Oil Filter Relocation from EFI solutions and Cooling pro oil cooler Many other things sitting in my garage waiting for that engine to come back. Progress pics to follow -  
    • Losses have to be less with DC coupling. Provided the battery inverter has decent MPP tracking ability - which really shouldn't be a problem. It's not 2005 any more.
×
×
  • Create New...