Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

This thread was started some time ago but read till end for follow up.

I here this expression frequently, some times in different context .

What does this mean exactly please?

How do you do it?

Why is super gromet style metal head gasket not sufficient? Or is it. <_<

An O ringed block will have a groove machined around each bore and a steel ring pressed into the groove. This will apply significantly more pressure to the gasket to prevent it blowing out under higher internal combustion pressures.

It is often accompanied by a matching groove in the head to further trap the gasket. Block O ring (if yoou are getting machining done) costs less than a metal gasket including the OEM gasket.

Wouldn't mind a wiki set up with technical terms like these.. great description GTRGeoff wasn't too sure of it myself..

Good idea :) Wiki's are useful and we can tell everyone to search the wiki instead of the woeful forum search.

Good idea :( Wiki's are useful and we can tell everyone to search the wiki instead of the woeful forum search.

What do you mean woeful?

There is nothing wrong with the search functions of this forum.

I use it so often and within 5 mins tops ive found what i was looking for, or enough information to make more questions.

Wouldn't mind a wiki set up with technical terms like these

Well make one yourself, maintain it yourself and submit it to the Admin

(i guess thats where the idea stops eh?)

Here's a link to a wiki that i was playing around with a while ago, dont have a lot of spare time at the moment though. If we can get enough useful info on here i'll register a proper domain name for it. Most of the info can be cut and pasted from other places on the net.

Skyline Wiki

This is not something for backyard mechanics, but a specialised engine machine shop will have no problems sourcing and fitting.

So is it better than a quality metal grommet style gasket or simply cheaper because one can use a cheaper gasket ?

I assume that one could not use a metal gasket if it hasbeen O ringed?

Here's a link to a wiki that i was playing around with a while ago, dont have a lot of spare time at the moment though. If we can get enough useful info on here i'll register a proper domain name for it.  Most of the info can be cut and pasted from other places on the net.

Skyline Wiki

Fatal error: Call to undefined function: getspecial() in /home/content/b/3/3/b33st/html/wiki/index.php on line 97

:lol:

If you wanna talk about setting something up, im more than willing to help with it all, simple enough to do id imagine.

Just gotta have the interest.

So is it better than a quality metal grommet style gasket or simply cheaper because one can use a cheaper gasket ?

I assume that one could not use a metal gasket if it hasbeen O ringed?

People use both, as posted above, but it depends on your power requirements.

The gaskets ability to hold pressure is the combination of its own structural strength at its weakest point, the clamping pressure of the head and head bolts, the evenness of the clamping pressure and any ancilliary aids to retention such as O rings or W rings. I've used an RB30 gasket modified to fit the RB25 at a time when RB25 parts were scarce and I had to move the car from Canberra to Melbourne and eventually it just pushed the gasket sideways into the water gallery. Blowing the head gasket could be from displacement, warping of the head, corrosion/poor preparation or a combination of those. The rings help prevent displacement.

Edit: as for is it better than the super grommet gasket, that is using stock gasket and O ring, I don't know. You would have to be producing some massive power for it to have to need better, and so cost would be little inconvenience and you would use the best of everything.

People use both, as posted above, but it depends on your power requirements.

The gaskets ability to hold pressure is the combination of its own structural strength at its weakest point, the clamping pressure of the head and head bolts, the evenness of the clamping pressure and any ancilliary aids to retention such as O rings or W rings. I've used an RB30 gasket modified to fit the RB25 at a time when RB25 parts were scarce and I had to move the car from Canberra to Melbourne and eventually it just pushed the gasket sideways into the water gallery. Blowing the head gasket could be from displacement, warping of the head, corrosion/poor preparation or a combination of those. The rings help prevent displacement.

Edit: as for is it better than the super grommet gasket, that is using stock gasket and O ring, I don't know. You would have to be producing some massive power for it to have to need better, and so cost would be little inconvenience and you would use the best of everything.

Thanks  for your oppinion Geoff,

i understandall what you said . My main piont and question is that many people use the term O ringedblock as if it is something super special  where i now see it as simply an cheaper alternative( in the long run) than an expensive quality gromet style aftermarket head gasket.

I will run with my Tommie super grommet and new ARP studs for now.

Thank you all for yor input. 

Dave, A quality metal head gasket is upto just about anything you want to thro at it with most big power cars using them but the Oring adds that much more reliability in massive boost cars tuned to the limit like you plan for yours. When using an Oring on a metal head gasket it can take days to settle needing to be retensioned a few times before startup and then retension after its been run.Many 1000+hp cars run the metal gasket alone without trouble but at about $130 to Oring it wont add much to a major buildup and does seem to help if you overheat your engine and leaking after overheating seems to be the only weakness of metal gaskets.

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

    • The oil pressure sensor for logging, does it happen to be the one that was slowly breaking out of the oil block? If it is,I would be ignoring your logs. You had a leak at the sensor which would mean it can't read accurately. It's a small hole at the sensor, and you had a small hole just before it, meaning you could have lost significant pressure reading.   As for brakes, if it's just fluid getting old, you won't necessarily end up with air sitting in the line. Bleed a shit tonne of fluid through so you effectively replace it and go again. Oh and, pay close attention to the pressure gauge while on track!
    • I don't know it is due to that. It could just be due to load on track being more than a dyno. But it would be nice to rule it out. We're talking a fraction of a second of pulling ~1 degree of timing. So it's not a lot, but I'd rather it be 0... Thicker oil isn't really a "bandaid" if it's oil that is going to run at 125C, is it? It will be thicker at 100 and thus at 125, where the 40 weight may not be as thick as one may like for that use. I already have a big pump that has been ported. They (They in this instance being the guy that built my heads) port them so they flow more at lower RPM but have a bypass spring that I believe is ~70psi. I have seen 70psi of oil pressure up top in the past, before I knew I had this leak. I have a 25 row oil cooler that takes up all the space in the driver side guard. It is interesting that GM themselves recommend 0-30 oil for their Vette applications. Unless you take it to the track where the official word is to put 20-50w oil in there, then take that back out after your track day is done and return to 0-30.
    • Nice, looks great. Nice work getting the factory parts also. Never know when you'll need them.
    • Thanks @jtha7 I will have a look around tomorrow but it is a prick of a spot. These are some photos i tried taking 
    • I take it that the knock retard is from bearings tapping a little tune? Thicker oil is a fragile bandaid. You need a much bigger oil cooler and probably the bigger pump being discussed.
×
×
  • Create New...