Before I jump into this topic I am sure some of you might have figured out that there was some tension leading up to the runoffs between Drago and myself, but I am glad to say that we have put that behind us and moved on.
However I am definitely not in Drago’s East Street camp and this is NOT to be interpreted in any way as anything to do with what happened at the runoffs. That championship has been won.
This post is about looking FORWARD to make things more transparent in the tech shed for ALL dumb racers just like me.
The reason that I bring this up is that Jim brought a cylinder head and some NEW test tooling to the ARRC to show a possible new approach to cylinder head testing to make sure that the head measurement issue that happened at the runoffs does not happen again to ANYONE.
The cylinder head that he showed to Mike Rossini, Jeff Labounty, Alex Bolanos, SCCA tech, and myself was prepared as follows
- 2 cylinders were bone stock (no machining whatsoever)
- 1 cylinder – machined to slightly under the spec ( .005 under)
- 1 cylinder – machined slightly over spec (.010 over)
The test is simple - if the tool drops into the cavity the cylinder head is a FAIL. If they don’t drop into the cavity the cylinder head is a PASS.
Real simple, you would think ……… well not so much!!!!
What was fascinating to me was that depending on how you use the tool, EVEN the new tool that Jim showed us can produce completely different results.
If you let gravity take the weight of the tool down, and the tools do not enter the cavities, then the head passes, and Jim demonstrated the tools passing the test on all aspects of the two untouched stock cylinders. He then showed that with a gentle push, the relief-cut test tool would fail the 3rd cylinder machined just under the spec (.005 under). On the 4th cylinder the test failed all aspects – the tools fell into the plunge cut cavities and the relief cut cavities, an obvious FAIL.
So here comes the part that Jim did NOT expect. Based on what I saw on the 3rd cylinder, I took the tool myself and confirmed it myself, and then just messing around I found that I was ALSO easily able to gently push the test tool into the cavities on the two UNMACHINED STOCK cylinders with little to no force. You could tell from the look on Drago’s face that he had no idea that the relief cut would fail on the stock cylinders on this head.
So ………… if I was the guy doing the tech and I pushed in the test tools that were provided to me, I would have failed the stock head, NO QUESTION! If someone else had used the same tool and let the tool fall under its own weight, the head would have passed.
In my opinion all test tools must allow ZERO room for interpretation, so even these new tools raise some questions, or the specs need some reworking.
So here is the dilemma. There are for sure going to be some BONE STOCK cylinder heads that fail this test based on the published specs we have for our engines. However, if we all have access to the same tools, we will, or our engine builders will measure the stock head like this one, and reject it even before we or they start working their magic.
But from what I saw, I personally think there has to be some re-investigation on the dimension spec for the relief cuts as it worries me that this dimension (not sure how it was decided on) is going to put many existing engines in the FAIL category.
Jim – if you can, I suggest taking some pics of the tools themselves and the tools in the cavities showing PASS / FAIL conditions and even doing a simple short video with your phone and uploading to YouTube so others can see what Mike and I saw this weekend.
I think Drago is going in the right direction with the tools, I just think the spec needs some consideration based on the variation in stock engine specs. Bye the way there are absolutely stock untouched engines that will NOT pass the plunge depth dimension too, there is that much variation in mass production.
If there are any others out there that have a better idea or some ideas for improvement, our class will be most appreciative. And I take my hat off to all the contributors like Drago, Wheeler, Collins and others who selflessly contribute so much of their time to make this class, without a doubt, clearly the best place to go racing!