Thread: FE 390 valve cover gasket help.
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06-01-2011 05:34 PM #1
FE 390 valve cover gasket help.
i just recently picked up a 67 thunderbird with a 390 in it. the valve covers leaked bad when i got it, so i changed the gaskets and 2 days later they are leaking again. does anyone know a better gasket to make these covers seal? they are the stock stamped steel covers. any help would be greatly appreciated.
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06-01-2011 05:44 PM #2
tin covers often become the victims of over tightened valve cover bolts. Might be best to start with removing the covers and all the gasket remnants, then ping and ding the sealing surface nice and flat with a small hammer and a body dolly or similar piece of flat metal. Then try some new gaskets and torque the bolts to spec....Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, Live for Today!
Carroll Shelby
Learning must be difficult for those who already know it all!!!!
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06-02-2011 07:05 AM #3
What Dave said is quite true and I would add that your mating surfaces are not clean. After ensuring that the mating surfaces are devoid of any gasket material I would get a clean rag, shop towel, etc and a can of brake parts cleaner and a pair of rubber gloves. Spray a bit of the cleaner on the rag and wipe down the mating surfaces and it will clean the mating surfaces of any oil residue which will allow the gaskets to seal better.Ken Thomas
NoT FaDe AwaY and the music didn't die
The simplest road is usually the last one sought
Wild Willie & AA/FA's The greatest show in drag racing
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06-02-2011 09:22 AM #4
i cleaned them . razorblade, and brake clean the first time. i looked at them again this moring and realized that some of the oil on the passengers side is coming from in between when the head and intake mani seal together on the back of the head. and both valve covers do appear to had a rollto the flanges. im gonna go ahead and do the intake manifold gasket as well, and i may find some cast aluminum valve covers. thank you for the input
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06-02-2011 10:41 AM #5
Stay upwind of the brake cleaner. Nasty stuff for your lungs.PLANET EARTH, INSANE ASYLUM FOR THE UNIVERSE.
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06-02-2011 12:08 PM #6
thanks i heard lots of skin contact makes it go to your liver too.
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06-02-2011 02:56 PM #7
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06-04-2011 07:55 AM #8
i know what you mean with the expanders. and the oil holes are clean. i pulled valve covers againa nd both are warped up in numerous spots. also pulling the manifold just cause. a new set of gaskets cant hurt anything i figure.
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06-04-2011 10:30 AM #9
valve covers are 8 - 10 ft/lbs or (96 - 120 in/lbs)Never take life too serious.....You wont make it out alive
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06-06-2011 03:09 PM #10
Im not messing up. covers were already bent. where did you get your 4-7? because i have an original 67 ford shop service manual and it says 10.
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06-06-2011 03:54 PM #11
Shifty,
I agree, the references I see state 10ftlbs for valve covers in 1967
Ford 352 360 390 406 427 428 V8 Engine Specs | Torque Specs - Cylinder Numbering - Firing Order - Distributor Rotation
I'd say 4ftlbs is really light for valve cover bolts.Roger
Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
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06-06-2011 04:28 PM #12
I have a 1980 Ford manuel that says 5-7
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06-06-2011 05:05 PM #13
Whatever, Louey. If you have the information why not simply tell the guy the right range?? Why ask him,
"Do you know what the bolt torque is for the valve covers when you tighten them ??", when you have what you believe to be the accurate answer at hand? Seems to me the helpful way would be to say, "The revised torque value from Ford in that era was 4-7ftlbs." Whatever floats your boat.Roger
Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
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06-08-2011 04:18 PM #14
I worked at a Ford dealership for 6 years during that time period. All the dealerships had revisions all the time.
you ask a question you get more than an answer. with mechanics like you i can see why revisions need to be made. have fun spending your remaining days as a prick.
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06-08-2011 05:59 PM #15
What did you lift the manifold with?
Welcome to CHR. I think that you need to hook up your vacuum advance. At part throttle when cruising you have less air and fuel in each cylinder, and the air-fuel mixture is not as densely packed...
MSD 8360 distributor vacuum advance