Thanks for positive replies. Reweld it is then!
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Help! Any experience w. Sanderson/Garagistic headers for LS1 swap
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I will definitely sand down the welds so I can see if they are as porous as I suspect. Also, the mating surface is only the bead of weld material so it's quite narrow, is that enough for a good seal? I will have to sand it down to make that smooth, and possibly reweld the connections on the other side as it's only tacked on, would that cause any warpage?
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I wouldn't touch them. I'd install as is and test them. If after testing you find leaks then reweld.Current: '91 DS M3, '03 TS M3 (6MT)
'06 Chevy 2500 Duramax - Race car hauler, '90 Corvette - Weekend toy
Past: '88 AW M3, '87 RB M6, '98 CS M3, '88 DS M3, '88 Zinno M3, '88 AW SETA (facelift),
1988 Super E (Bronzit - grey wrap)- RIP, 1986 353, 1986 VW Jetta (vr6) - Racecar
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Quit worrying and use a standard GM LS header gasket. They work just fine -- we've had one set on our car for 7yrs+ with no worries. I'm skeptical that no gasket is a good idea: expand-contract every heat cycle with steel headers expanding half as much as the aluminum heads. Yes, Sanderson says "no gasket, just HiTemp RTV", maybe that works but I trust that the GM Powertrain engineers know what they're doing.E30-LS1 aka. 357is
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Originally posted by Mustachio View PostNo and probably won't be for a little while. But I saw that your are looking into the headers yourself, it seems like Hooker is an option, pun intended. If you can get them for 300$ like you say then go for it since I'm sure the quality will be better.First e30 - 1991 318i 4 door
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Originally posted by sgtskid View PostI can't speak to the quality of the welds but the flange which bolts to the head is suppose to look like that. Garagistic recommends using a bead of high temp Permatex but otherwise the headers are suppose to be "gasket less"
That is also one of the most horrifying designs for a sealing surface I've ever seen. Just because someone sits at a CAD workstation does not make that person an engineer.
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Originally posted by The Dark Side of Will View Post"Gasketless" is horseshit.
That is also one of the most horrifying designs for a sealing surface I've ever seen. Just because someone sits at a CAD workstation does not make that person an engineer.
While I agree that adding silicone or Permatex is cheating and what I would still consider a gasket, industry standards allow for the use of Permatex and still call the assembly "gasketless."
Don't confuse design with execution.Last edited by sgtskid; 01-09-2017, 01:32 PM.Current: '91 DS M3, '03 TS M3 (6MT)
'06 Chevy 2500 Duramax - Race car hauler, '90 Corvette - Weekend toy
Past: '88 AW M3, '87 RB M6, '98 CS M3, '88 DS M3, '88 Zinno M3, '88 AW SETA (facelift),
1988 Super E (Bronzit - grey wrap)- RIP, 1986 353, 1986 VW Jetta (vr6) - Racecar
IG: RDE_Fabrications
Check us out
Or YouTube --> HERE;
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It's weld bead applied to a flange and then ground. The contact pressure on the rings and the globs next to the bolt holes is going to be very high. It will be bolted to aluminum, which creeps and relaxes at elevated temp and high stresses.
ETA: To which "industry standard" are you referring?Last edited by The Dark Side of Will; 01-16-2017, 12:58 AM.
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Why is a high contact pressure bad? What does it being bolted to Aluminum have to do with anything? Headers that use gaskets are steel bolted to Aluminum with a thinner piece of steel sandwiched in between.
The exhaust has minimal pressure (if any) and a perfect surface, while ideal, isn't needed. Gasket less manifolds come factory on many vehicles and their surfaces don't look pretty either, but they work. The biggest issue with bolting steel to aluminum is the difference in expansion rates will cause the header bolts to back out. A backed out / loose bolt will cause a leak regardless of what material is used as a gasket. Cast manifolds are slightly less prone to this but it still occurs. Either way, this has nothing to do with whether or not there is a gasket between the surface. Higher contact pressure is good, better seal. Since the torque on the header bolts remains the same, the only way to achieve higher contact pressure is to reduce the area. Hence ground flat bead run around each of the openings. The globs around the bolt holes are there to support the flange and even the clamping force across the whole flange. Otherwise, the flange would warp around the bolt holes when tightened. <-- that would really cause all kinds of issues.
Perhaps "industry standard" was a poor choice of wording. "Common practice" might be better. There isn't an ASTM, ASME, ANSI, etc reference I can send you to (at least not that I am aware of). However, it is common for manufactures to not use a gasket and still recommend some form of sealant be used.Current: '91 DS M3, '03 TS M3 (6MT)
'06 Chevy 2500 Duramax - Race car hauler, '90 Corvette - Weekend toy
Past: '88 AW M3, '87 RB M6, '98 CS M3, '88 DS M3, '88 Zinno M3, '88 AW SETA (facelift),
1988 Super E (Bronzit - grey wrap)- RIP, 1986 353, 1986 VW Jetta (vr6) - Racecar
IG: RDE_Fabrications
Check us out
Or YouTube --> HERE;
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Originally posted by sgtskid View PostWhy is a high contact pressure bad? What does it being bolted to Aluminum have to do with anything? Headers that use gaskets are steel bolted to Aluminum with a thinner piece of steel sandwiched in between.
Originally posted by sgtskid View PostThe exhaust has minimal pressure (if any) and a perfect surface, while ideal, isn't needed. Gasket less manifolds come factory on many vehicles and their surfaces don't look pretty either, but they work. The biggest issue with bolting steel to aluminum is the difference in expansion rates will cause the header bolts to back out. A backed out / loose bolt will cause a leak regardless of what material is used as a gasket. Cast manifolds are slightly less prone to this but it still occurs. Either way, this has nothing to do with whether or not there is a gasket between the surface. Higher contact pressure is good, better seal. Since the torque on the header bolts remains the same, the only way to achieve higher contact pressure is to reduce the area. Hence ground flat bead run around each of the openings. The globs around the bolt holes are there to support the flange and even the clamping force across the whole flange. Otherwise, the flange would warp around the bolt holes when tightened. <-- that would really cause all kinds of issues.
Perhaps "industry standard" was a poor choice of wording. "Common practice" might be better. There isn't an ASTM, ASME, ANSI, etc reference I can send you to (at least not that I am aware of). However, it is common for manufactures to not use a gasket and still recommend some form of sealant be used.
Or whose manifold looks like the Sanderson example.
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