I will now turn my attention to the cylinder heads. Probably need to explain why I have made some of the choices I did with these heads. My original goal was to build an engine for my weekend toy capable of producing 550 RWHP. The stock heads flow adequately to reach this goal. Therefore, no porting, polishing, bronze guides or lightweight (std. diameter or oversize) valves will be used. It is my personal
opinion that often times large amounts of funds are spent on cylinder head work when the supporting mods don't justify the expense. I will be grinding the stock valves and reassembling these heads with new valve seals and Comp Cams 26125-24 High load Valve Springs and Comp Cams 700-24 Steel (Not titanium) retainers due to the Comp Cams 127350 XFI VSR Stage 2 Blower Cams I will be using. Both heads have been surfaced .003" to produce a straight/flat gasket surface with a 10 RA finish. I should mention that the Rottler seat & guide machine I used, grinds all seats to the exact same dimension (location and width). Same for the valves. As a result all stems are the exact same height.
Cylinder heads deserve the same attention to detail when it comes to cleanliness as the block and crankshaft. Oil flows though the heads to the lash adjusters, roller followers, cam journals, VCT solenoids and phasers. Therefore the heads are completely disassembled and all passages cleaned with a cleaning brush. Then dried with compressed air and inspected for cleanliness.
Note: be very careful when choosing a cleaning process on these aluminum heads. I do not believe in glass bead cleaning cylinder heads as, in my opinion, it is next to impossible to remove all the glass beads. Also need to be careful when putting these heads in any type of a solvent tank as the tubes for the spark plugs/coils are only sealed to the aluminum cylinder head castings with sealant. Harsh chemicals (aluminum cleaners, gasket remover, even Brake Clean) can damage this sealant and the result is an oil leak at the COPs. Therefore I only carefully use a pressure washer and mild degreasing soap (Dawn for example) to clean these 3V aluminum heads. This method will adequately clean these heads for any type of repair procedure.
Bare head castings cleaned and ready for reassembly