CAN You Reuse Cylinder Head Bolts? Testing Myths + ARP Custom Aged 625+

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Torque Test Channel

Torque Test Channel

Жыл бұрын

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Today we test various myths about cylinder head studs and torque to yield bolts. Most of which were suggested by you guys, thanks for that!
~Links may include affiliate links, which we earn some % from sales on~
Torque, who started TTC, is working in product development for Astro Tools. TTC is not the only testing out there, always consider multiple sources when looking at a tool!

Пікірлер: 650
@nmbmtl
@nmbmtl Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: Honda actually says you can reuse cylinder head bolts and gives a separate torque sequence for it (one less 90 deg turn.). This still assumes they're not stretched too far of course and there is a thinness where you replace them.
@FordRanchero289
@FordRanchero289 Жыл бұрын
Do they have a TSB on how to remove the crank bolt?
@JCWren
@JCWren Жыл бұрын
@@FordRanchero289 Shaped charge using C4.
@Iowa599
@Iowa599 Жыл бұрын
@@FordRanchero289 no, there's no reason to have a TSB when the proper procedure is already in the FSM. The only difficulty people have is removing the crank pulley bolt without the factory tool to hold the crankshaft. That tool is available & it works, so there is no failure to justify a TSB. Even without that tool the crank bolts don't give me any trouble, so you must be a pussey.
@appelmelk5664
@appelmelk5664 Жыл бұрын
@@JCWren the shaped charge should contain approx 2500gr C4
@andrewwmacfadyen6958
@andrewwmacfadyen6958 Жыл бұрын
Yes as long bolt hasn't been grossly over tightened to the point of necking although the unloaded length of bolt of the used bolt will have increased by tiny fraction the actual load the bolt can carry before failure won't change, also the length of the bolt when loaded to failure doesn't really. What has to checked for is the condition of the threads that they screw in with out binding which would make the initial torquing before angular tightening wrong and make the angular tightening garbage.
@dangerrangerlstc
@dangerrangerlstc Жыл бұрын
Heavy engine tech here. Cummins has a spec for their head bolts for length. A common trick also is to take a nut and thread it up the bolt. If it makes it all the way up the threads by hand on clean threads, the bolt can be reused. If not, then the bolt has been stretched too much and must be replaced. I also replace any bolt that has seen any rust pitting since that creates a stress point that could cause the bolt to fail. As for torquing head bolts again the next day, the gain you got is within the allowable tolerance, so I would say when torquing, shoot for the higher end of tolerance and even after relaxing, it will still be in spec. I've never heard of the hammer trick to take the twist out, but I have used that for helping to free up rusty bolts. A couple of sharp raps with a hammer on the end of the stud or bolt helps free up any rust and makes it easier to free the bolt or stud. Not a guarantee, but helps often enough its worth doing every time
@andrewwmacfadyen6958
@andrewwmacfadyen6958 Жыл бұрын
Piano wire is pre-stretched beyond the yield point to increase the elastic limit. After stretching the unloaded length of the wire slightly permanently increases but the maximum tensile load the wire can carry doesn't change. The reason for pre-stretching the wire is to increase the elastic range of the material and make its behaviour more predictable. Because of its special properties pano wire was used by Armstrong of England to wind round the barrels of battleship guns to strengthen them and it was also used to reinforce the boilers of Stanley steamers.
@c0c0asauce
@c0c0asauce Жыл бұрын
This is why I scroll through comments.
@billj5645
@billj5645 Жыл бұрын
The process of drawing wire from larger diameter material down to its final diameter actually increases its strength because of the property called "work hardening". Work hardening actually uses up some of the ductility of the material to get to its stronger state, closer to its fracture point. At about 8:00 in the video is a graph of a stress strain curve. The curve is different for each steel alloy, some steels have a longer and flatter plateau at the top, and the final part of the curve to the right increases again before it reaches fracture. This is the point of work hardening. If you manipulate piano wire until you get it into this final part of the curve where the strength increases again then it will be at its maximum strength, but correspondingly closer to the fracture point.
@bradbeck2601
@bradbeck2601 Жыл бұрын
Interesting. If it weren't for this method, pianos would have to be tuned much more frequently I would imagine.
@wallacegrommet9343
@wallacegrommet9343 Жыл бұрын
My personal cannon for quelling noisy late-night parties around the ‘hood failed prematurely…must get some piano wire to deal with repeat offenders!
@AlexanderBurgers
@AlexanderBurgers Жыл бұрын
@@bradbeck2601 and on the opposite end, our old piano couldn't be tuned anymore because the wires were at their breaking point from being stretched and stretched, they'd have to be replaced to get it perfectly in tune again.
@afellowinnewengland6142
@afellowinnewengland6142 Жыл бұрын
Interesting tests and great work. I would love to see a video dedicated to addressing the never ending debate on whether it's ok to use anti-seize and lubricants on bolts because it changes the torque values and clamping force too much- thereby increasing bolt stretch and failure (especially on lug nuts, studs, etc). What is the actual impact on clamping load when we torque to say 100 ft lb dry vs lubricated with anti-seize? Thank you for your efforts.
@smnkm4ehfer
@smnkm4ehfer Жыл бұрын
There's usually a wet and dry torque spec available for that reason.
@legros731
@legros731 Жыл бұрын
Never put anything on lug nut dry only And a t 100ftlbs dry will be less tight that the 100lftlbs lubricated one Lubrication remove friction and give a better torque reading essential in critical bolt like head stud arp is even more precise with there special lube for torquing
@kain0m
@kain0m Жыл бұрын
@@legros731 Exactly. Never, ever lubricate wheel studs or lug nuts. They are held in place pretty much only by friction due to their short clamping length. That's the reason why headbolts are so long - the stretch allows them to stay tensioned (it "takes up the slack" during cyclic loading). Short bolts / studs can't take a significant amount of length change without reaching the point of no clamping load, at which point they are free to rotate out. Also, lubed bolts will fail at a lower torque, so by lubing a dry-specced bolt you're increasing the risk of breaking the bolt.
@demuskumarius
@demuskumarius Жыл бұрын
Anti-Seize isn't exactly a lubricant due to it having an abrasive in it. The lubrication feeling is misleading and generally torque settings are determined on a freshly machined bolt with a light coating of oil left from the machine process. Generally it's a 30% reduction in torque when using anti-seize according to a very in depth study conducted by NASA. That is if you were not provided the Wet and Dry torque specs from the manufacturer. Torque wrenches are an estimation anyway you look at it too. You in no way can measure the linear stretch of a bolt through numbers of rotations. You could measure a bolt length at factory torque, anti-seize it and then tighten the bolt until the length is achieved and that will get you your anti-seize torque setting too. If you properly stretch the bolt it should not matter what is on the threads as the elasticity of the metal is doing the holding. The massive amount of misunderstandings surrounding this subject has not only muddied the water, it filled it in and black topped over it. Another thing with not using anti-seize on hubs, rims and lugs is the extra torque then applied to the bolts through rust-jacking. There's far more to it once you stop listening to the fear mongering and actually go the full way down the rabbit hole. it took an effort digging through all the "I think therefor it's true" but it was worth putting my mind at ease since what I was being told, sometimes yell told, and what happens in the real world did not match. John Caddogin the Auto Expert .com.au has a couple videos that explain the wheel bolt side of it, worth checking out.
@TheCntryson47
@TheCntryson47 Жыл бұрын
Cat actually has you use copper anti seize on it's head bolt
@jth_printed_designs
@jth_printed_designs Жыл бұрын
The engineers developed the torqueing procedure to be completed as described, not with any other wacky methods to increase the amount of twist achieved. If you get an extra 10-20 degrees by using one of these hacks, you could just be over-yielding the bolts and putting them outside of their strongest region on the stress-strain curve (into the necking region). Either swap out to studs, or use new TTY bolts and follow the procedure outlined by the manufacturer.
@bobbygetsbanned6049
@bobbygetsbanned6049 Жыл бұрын
Exactly! Everyone always has some stupid hack because they don't even understand what they are trying to achieve. Obviously instead or requiring a waiting period, hammer strikes, ect they would just increase the torque ft/lbs or degrees if they wanted more.
@bobbygetsbanned6049
@bobbygetsbanned6049 Жыл бұрын
You need to test the affect of different lubricants on head studs. People think you can use any lube you want, but the wrong lube can lead to over torquing the nuts. Would be great to see ARP lube, vs Detroit Diesel #2 (peanut butter), vs 30w motor oil, and whatever else people use.
@MattPratt
@MattPratt Жыл бұрын
Another student from the Sloppy Mechanics school of Junkyard LS race motors here. All of my reused TTY head bolts have stood up to boost and abuse across a few builds.
@TorqueTestChannel
@TorqueTestChannel Жыл бұрын
Glad we can get practical experience in the comments too in order to see the whole picture. Thanks
@alexs.5675
@alexs.5675 Жыл бұрын
I used an impact on my rod and head bolts on a 4.8 spinning to the moon. So far so good lol
@tjoyce81
@tjoyce81 3 ай бұрын
That's a perfectly calibrated reply... lol @@TorqueTestChannel
@AaronBlankenship
@AaronBlankenship Жыл бұрын
This is the standard for how all channels should advertise subscribing. Start with interesting content that continues all the way to the end and doesn't waste the viewer's time. Follow it up with a reminder about how consistent the channel is about posting, and how you can follow that consistency by subscribing.
@4b131
@4b131 Жыл бұрын
Well the 'myth' on reusing TTY bolts.....I work for a major auto manufacturer (won't mention who to not freek anyone out) and one of our engine types started requiring cylinder head replacements for coolant and oil leaks from the casting. These use TTY bolts that are in very short supply and frequently go back ordered so we are required to reuse these bolts by the manufacturer if they are under a stated length when measured with a micrometer. Note if these are over the stated length they must be replaced. I'm not an engineer just a technician. As you can imagine most techs, me included, absolutely hate this idea but the engineers have obviously tested them as warranty concerns are a factor. We have yet to encounter a problem with any of these cylinder head replacements some being done over 2 years ago. I'm guessing that the engineers see this maximum stretch for reuse as still enough of a safety margin.
@Low760
@Low760 Жыл бұрын
Ford ecoboost?
@bleach_drink_me
@bleach_drink_me Жыл бұрын
A few manufacturers mention the same procedure for reusing tty head bolts in the FSM.
@kirilakmadjov8307
@kirilakmadjov8307 Жыл бұрын
Subaru impreza doesent mention to use new head bolts even though they are tty as it has 2 90degrees at the end
@mattmckie6967
@mattmckie6967 Жыл бұрын
@@Low760 you beat me to it. Lol
@JamsheedRpgGodBoss
@JamsheedRpgGodBoss Жыл бұрын
@@Low760 either that or GM 5.3 with the lifter issue.
@dickmick5517
@dickmick5517 Жыл бұрын
I loved where people with no background guess "reusing TTY bolts" is a good idea. Give the OEM's some credit. They know what they are doing and shave metallurgy and science to prove it.
@blkmoon33
@blkmoon33 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the work you put in to do these tests. Always entertaining to hear the arguments around the shop afterwards 🤣
@PoorSharkie
@PoorSharkie Жыл бұрын
7:15 if you use a snap-on digital torque wrench and do a degree torque, it flashes the finishing torque in ft-lbs. At the machine shop i worked at, we would torque heads 4 times. First at the seating torque(like 33ftlb), then the base torque (like 66ftlb), then the TTY 90 degrees, and we would note each torque reading from the torque wrench and go back a 4th time and do the rounded up average in ftlbs for the final torque. Never had any issues doing it this way, but just wanted to mention that you can read final torque after doing a TTY bolt. ❤️
@richardzielinski5707
@richardzielinski5707 Жыл бұрын
Yep, snap-on torque wrenches are great for making sure all of the bolts you're stretching get to roughly the same torque.
@aaronpops4108
@aaronpops4108 Жыл бұрын
Yup I do something similar. Sometimes one bolt will be 100lb-ft and another will be only 90. I don't mind making those numbers a little closer.
@V8Lenny
@V8Lenny Жыл бұрын
Angle torque idea is to get rid of inconsistent torque method, now you "experts" are messing that up.
@dominikkozela9763
@dominikkozela9763 2 күн бұрын
I did the same thing on main bolts. I torqued them to 20nm plus 70 degrees. Some ended up at 59nm and some at 65nm so I tightened them up just a little bit more to 63nm 😅
@yourolddad6407
@yourolddad6407 Жыл бұрын
One thing that really struck me was the added stretch of the used TTY bolt, it was more than the thickness of a typical MLS head gasket. Which probably explains why the only time I ever reused TTY head bolts the new head gasket failed shortly after being put back into service. The "good to go test" back then was to lay a straight edge on the threads of the used TTY bolt, if the peaks of the threads all touched then it was good to reuse, apparently not in my case.
@SinsBird
@SinsBird Жыл бұрын
Possibly over torqued the bolts.
@douglasmayherjr.5733
@douglasmayherjr.5733 Жыл бұрын
Great Video. I really appreciate the scientific testing and results. Nice to have unbiased information. Thanks
@cerneysmallengines
@cerneysmallengines Жыл бұрын
one tip I was given in high-school shop class was to add another torque step. torque the bolt to 5 ft pds less than the rated, let sit for a day and torque to proper spec. so for a SBC, it was a torque rating of 70, torque it to 65, let sit overnight and torque to the 70
@AutoRepairTips
@AutoRepairTips Жыл бұрын
Re used LS head bolts get torqued to 65 ft lbs. in two stages. Have a stock bottom end 5.3 that has seen north of 30 lbs of boost with reused head gaskets and bolts.
@TorqueTestChannel
@TorqueTestChannel Жыл бұрын
Living up to the user name
@fascistpedant758
@fascistpedant758 Жыл бұрын
If the OG factory specs required 94 lbs. for final torque, that's probably what it takes to get the same clamping force without further yielding the bolt.
@Bsk0123
@Bsk0123 Жыл бұрын
Sloppy mechanics community, has been doing that for years. Awesome watching guys like this running bigger boost on stock bottom end and reused head bolts. 👍
@funk49gang
@funk49gang Жыл бұрын
Hey! I think it would be cool to see a comparison of different metals that have hydrogen embrittlement vs without. I watch all your videos and i love the fastener stuff too!
@nickmcwilliams685
@nickmcwilliams685 Жыл бұрын
On small fasteners I've tried the hammer before the final torque thing. I had no way of measuring the tension but they definitely do turn a little more with the same torque limit on the wrench. This was on rifle scope rings so very small fasteners. I knew a marine core sniper and firearms trainer that did this for fighting rifles.
@georgeferlazzo7936
@georgeferlazzo7936 Жыл бұрын
Hello again Torque Test Channel Thank you again for another great video 👍 Not being a automotive mechanic I haven't seen this issue surface before. Again thank you 😊
@me3333
@me3333 Жыл бұрын
When you did the heat test, I wonder if the increase in torque might have been in part do to the hydraulic oil expanding from the heat as well
@randr10
@randr10 Жыл бұрын
I thought of that too but it would have to heat the whole reservoir as well to make any appreciable difference. Just looked it up and oil expands by about 4% every 100*F. Aluminum is about 1/4 of that and iron is about half again as much, so it would be significant if it was warming up that much. He could check the temp. of the output fitting on the pump he's using. My guess is that not much of that heat is getting down through the column of oil though.
@kiyosenl.3889
@kiyosenl.3889 Жыл бұрын
You can use one of those digital torque guage adapters to read the torque being produced while you do the angle
@paulwolf8444
@paulwolf8444 Жыл бұрын
The reason for the tty bolts is that during the plasticization phase, it lowers the preload on the threads themselves. This lower preload in a repeated expansion/ contraction application leads to less long-term failure from high loads enableling a smaller fastener size. You can reuse bolts with stretch left because it's all about preload and there are Guages that measure the bolts.
@matd3150
@matd3150 Жыл бұрын
Great video. I was excited to see the re-used tty bolt, but everyone says to use a torque of around 65lbft and not to degree it again. In my head that seems like a better method instead of double yeilding the bolt. One retailer of ARP headstuds for cummins had a specific tq sequence, and it was a pain. You would work your way up to final tq, then loosen and torque again 3 times, plug the block heater in over night, let it cool, then do a final tq. No idea if this extra work helped, but i never puked a gasket that way
@mareprah
@mareprah Жыл бұрын
Yeeey, I see you read my comment about the dial indicator reading from the bottom (or someone elses comment that was the same ;) ). Cheers bro, you "owe" me one dial :P
@AlexanderBurgers
@AlexanderBurgers Жыл бұрын
The repair manual for my car actually has a spec for the bolt overall length to see if they're still good to re-use or if they're stretched too much. I have re-used TTY bolts, but the second time they do feel different to me, less 'stretchy' if anything, but that's not really a scientific measurement. :)
@kennethdandurand3472
@kennethdandurand3472 Жыл бұрын
Pretty close though, huh?
@bigc9464
@bigc9464 Жыл бұрын
I work on aot of overhead cam ford engines. Depending on the assembly instructions you come across. Some specify to "pre stretch" the bolts. Primarily the ford instructions, and those that copied it verbatim. Their procedure says to got 30 ft/lbs +90°. Loosen it then start over and do +90 twice. I only follow that method on higher performance engines. Stock engines get no pre stretch, and sometimes I've had to reuse old head bolts in a couple holes when new ones yield too much and don't get tighter on the last 90 degrees. Every engine is still running. Some 8-9 years later.
@bobroberts2371
@bobroberts2371 Жыл бұрын
I don't think this is to " pre stretch " the bolts , It is more to give initial compression to the head gasket, release tension then final torque. From what I recall this was on a non TTY engine. ( Maybe an OHC Renault Alliance? )
@bigc9464
@bigc9464 Жыл бұрын
@@bobroberts2371 the sequence I'm talking about is directly from tty headbolt sequence for the ford modular engines. But yes. There are okder non tty sequences that are similar for exactly what you said. But new gasket technology eliminates that need. Also making sure the center bolts are at the initial torque before going to the next stage after pulling them all up makes a bug difference
@monte0704
@monte0704 Жыл бұрын
BMW is famous for this on their Rod Bolts. 5NM, 30NM, then +90 Degrees. You then back it off one full turn (totally loose) and do it again. THEN you back it off AGAIN and retorque 5, 30, then 90 degrees for a third and final time and you're done. I found, buried in the service manual, you must stretch the bolts at least 3 times, and no more than 5 times while assembling the engine, and throw them away if removed after the engine is started and ran.
@scottallpress3818
@scottallpress3818 Жыл бұрын
A lot of Nissan stuff did the same …. I didn’t ever do it . Seemed counterintuitive to me. Never had an issue with any
@andrewdynes5300
@andrewdynes5300 Жыл бұрын
This is to 'bed in' the friction surfaces. The thread engagement points and the point between the bolt head and washer.
@christophershafer5615
@christophershafer5615 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for testing these! Do you think the 3rd test is just the head and shank twisting on the surface but not moving the threads?
@mdtransmissionspecialties
@mdtransmissionspecialties Жыл бұрын
Great video guys!
@bobroberts2371
@bobroberts2371 Жыл бұрын
TTY bolts. When these were first being used, some manuals said that it was OK to reuse for one time however, being number of uses can't always be verified, they recommended replacement. ( I'd have to dig a bit for what make / model ) I think there is actually a diameter / length spec for reuse in some applications. TTY bolts are cheap, the cost to evaluate used bolts can be expensive / skill based so I'm betting that is the driver for bolt replacement rather than reuse. When installing new TTY bolts you can feel the torque level off before you reach the recommended TQ angle. This extra angle after the TQ levels off gives you enough of a turn to negate any frictional losses in the initial TQ. I've reused TTY bolts by making sure they are original, using the factory pre TQ then turning until I feel the TQ levels off then about 10 degrees more. For new TTY bolts I've taken not to be worried about an exact angle if I pay attention to the TQ leveling off and I'm at least somewhere near the factory angle. Bottom line? If for customer, replace TTY bolts. For your own patch together / late night repairs, reuse can be OK.
@gszman
@gszman Жыл бұрын
Most larger diesel engines use TTY bolts that can be reused 1-5 times. Cummins actually supplies a gauge to measure bolts for re-use. However my opinion on the matter, is head bolts are cheap insurance. I've pulled a few cylinder heads that had a snapped in half head bolt resting in it.
@unbiasedcobra6672
@unbiasedcobra6672 Жыл бұрын
if you have the head off, your bill is already going to be pretty big. You may as well cover your ass and replace them.
@willagresham2978
@willagresham2978 Жыл бұрын
I work on large AG and have rebuilt quite a few Diesel engines. I mainly work on John Deere equipment. I’ve seen anywhere from measure and reuse (I never reuse) torque to yield that has you let the bolts “rest” for 15 minutes after the initial torque. These are very interesting. I’ve noticed while performing the torque sequence, the first bolt in the sequence is way low compared to what it was initially torqued to. I built a Yanmar once and it said to torque bolts after 50 hours of operation. One thing that was consistent with all of them is coating threads and under the bolt head with SAE 30 weight oil. Something about the straight 30 weight oil that helps keep the torque consistent vs a multi weight. Btw finding a straight weight oil can be challenging.
@jafa1402
@jafa1402 Жыл бұрын
SAE-30 , take a look in the lawnmower section.
@embededfabrication4482
@embededfabrication4482 Жыл бұрын
oh baloney, how can 30 vs 10W30 make any difference in torquing a bolt. LOL, everybody knows that castor oil works best
@MegaMarclar
@MegaMarclar Жыл бұрын
Tons of different types of tty bolts. Lots of manufacturers re use them. Honda, Chrysler, so on. Some actually have a special tool that is a thread gauge to test for stretch
@tonysheerness2427
@tonysheerness2427 Жыл бұрын
When I was working in a garage many years ago, they used to say to re torque the bolts after 3000 miles. That gives the engine, head and gasket time to settle and then the head bolts and gasket should last the life of the engine. Head gasket failure is usually down torquing the studs in the wrong order. Usually you work from the centre of the head out.
@jrt2924
@jrt2924 Жыл бұрын
On mercedes engine (tuned) we use 12.9 bolts instead stretch bolts and we do 50nm then loosen 50-70-90nm run engine hot let it cool down completely then 120-125nm seems to work great.
@mathuetax
@mathuetax Жыл бұрын
Mythbusters, Mythbusters! Woooo! This would put my friends to sleep but I can't be more delighted! MORE!!!!!!
@bluntmuffin1729
@bluntmuffin1729 Жыл бұрын
Hey I made some of those bolts! Really interesting to see these tests.
@TorqueTestChannel
@TorqueTestChannel Жыл бұрын
Well done!
@timw.5030
@timw.5030 Жыл бұрын
I have no clue about any of this but that was interesting as hell. So thanks
@MacPoop
@MacPoop Жыл бұрын
The problem with a lot of the high dollar stud kits is that they're only really useful for about half a percent of all the engines out there. Like anything engine-related there's just a lot of smoke & mirrors & straight up unnecessary precision 99.5% of applications just don't need. Case in point is the Honda guy who lubes the backside of rod & main bearings (the saddle side) then clamps the living piss out of his rod & main caps to smash everything down to spec. Now I'm not saying there's anything wrong with stud kits, quite the opposite, BUT, a whole lot of the time it's just straight up unnecessary unless you're trying to 3,000hp out of a 24v Cummins or other such nonsense. My experience in engine building has taught me that if you're lifting heads in blown applications you really need to upgrade your head bolt count from 4 to 5 or even 6 rather than throwing expensive studs at a 4-bolt block trying to keep the pressure in. Same applies to main caps, if your cranks keep walking you probably should spend the money on a 4 or 6 bolt main block, or invest in a good girdle. That's just my 2 cents on it.. often saves money in the long run by avoiding broken parts
@lolatmyage
@lolatmyage Жыл бұрын
I see it with other hobbies as well, the main thing seems to be buying new things to solve the problem, the person is just installing parts instead of putting in any thought or work to find the most effective fix.
@jpop2499
@jpop2499 Жыл бұрын
It would be very interesting to see how socket head cap screws compare as well as xotic brand.
@deankruse8751
@deankruse8751 Жыл бұрын
On the topic of heating bolts to get more tension. On caterpillar hydraulic hammers for breaking concrete with an excavator, the bolt shanks are exposed and you are meant to tighten them slightly then heat the exposed shank in order to lengthen it then let it cool and it will end up being incredibly tight. Might want to mill a window into the simulated head to get access to the shank and give it a try. I know it's not very representative of a cylinder head but it would be interesting to have some data on it in general
@dickmick5517
@dickmick5517 Жыл бұрын
Heating the bolts, then torquing them, is standard procedure on steam turbines.
@GlyphZero
@GlyphZero Жыл бұрын
i've definitely tapped the heads of bolts as i was finger tightening them to take the nasty little bits out of it and the thread so i can take them out easier later when an operator breaks the heads off.
@matthewzuber9823
@matthewzuber9823 Жыл бұрын
you guys have the best scientific method, and theory testing that i have ever seen!
@BLKMGK4
@BLKMGK4 3 ай бұрын
Checkout Project Farm, he does a ton of interesting testing too!
@matthewzuber9823
@matthewzuber9823 3 ай бұрын
@@BLKMGK4 I love project farm! Oftentimes when I need to make a purchase I will review his videos to see if he's made content about the topic
@hydrocarbon8272
@hydrocarbon8272 Жыл бұрын
One thing I noticed with re-used LS bolts (head, rods, mains) is you can't use the tq+angle method. It leads to a very different clamping force. I had marked bolts in an untouched factory block, loosened, then torqued - they ended up going past the marks each time and different bearing clearance. That seems in-line with what Honda says about re-using their bolts.
@randr10
@randr10 Жыл бұрын
I very specifically remember seeing in old repair manuals (like 1960s or older) that if you're going to install a head, you torque the bolts, heat cycle the engine once or twice, then re-torque. I did this most recently on a Kubota diesel engine and I did in fact get a significant increased turn on several of the bolts at the same ft-lbs on the torque wrench. I'd say like an 1/8 turn or so, maybe a little more on one. I figured since I needed to go in the valve cover and check the valve lash after a short run in as per the factory repair manual, I might as well torque the head bolts again. I was surprised that so many moved honestly because it was a modern head gasket and the factory manual didn't say anything about doing that. Kind of glad I did now.
@randr10
@randr10 Жыл бұрын
I also think it would be interesting to do the TTY bolts with a series of goldilocks-finding torque attempts. Like you could go 60-65-70-75 and then test them all for stretch under hydraulic pressure and their failure point. The scientist in me is convinced that there should be a sweet spot to get another use out of them. Just thought of something. Use a beam style torque wrench and torque on the bolt until it gets to the same pressure range as the original TTY sequence, then record the number you reach. Maybe do 3 or 5 to see if they're consistent, then do your stretch test to see if they're weaker after re-torqueing.
@MrHeHim
@MrHeHim Жыл бұрын
I reused the factory bolt set on a FEW 90's Civic's and on a 88 Turbo Supra I had. Supra's head lifted a few months after i got it, new factory composite head gasket lasted 7 years and about 100k miles in the Supra running about 320hp to the wheel before i sold it. It was my daily and i wanted to keep the original turbo without over spinning it, vertically no turbo lag above 4200rpm. I did retorque after a week of normal driving, repeated 2 more times to make sure they weren't walking out as the 7M-GTE tends to do to head bolts. I tapped and died the holes and used factory bolts because there was carbon left over, as engine oil is recommended as thread lube per factory instructions. Increased (from i think) the factory 65ft/lbs to 85 ( ithink) i can't remember quite right
@frijoli9579
@frijoli9579 Жыл бұрын
The "hammer" trick was based on snug bolts, then torqued. The reason for this was that any irregularities in the block that could cause friction were removed/seated in the hole threads.. This actually does work, meaning the bolts were less prone to becoming "loose", but it does nothing to the bolt/stud itself.
@ittimjones
@ittimjones Жыл бұрын
I do it for my pool filter clamp. It's plastic on plastic with metal bolts. A couple whacks with a mallet and I can EASILY turn those nuts tighter. I just keep going till it's not easy to do anymore. I imagine it's the same for just about any other high friction application.
@Cheepchipsable
@Cheepchipsable Жыл бұрын
They do this to relieve tension in body work. When you push/pull a steel panel back into place, you tap where it joins to relieve the tension in the metal so it doesn't try to return to it's former shape due to steels elastic properties.
@Skinflaps_Meatslapper
@Skinflaps_Meatslapper Жыл бұрын
It's also used on wooden props with aircraft. Wood props require periodic re-torque because the wood compresses over time (unless you have steel bushings). Giving it a good whack with a mallet and a second re-torque equates to less torque lost before your next re-torque. It's also a way to get that last bit of torque out of a larger radial engine prop nut, when you're hanging with all of your weight on a 4ft extension bar and someone taps the prop shaft, you can feel it tighten up just a tiny bit (600+ft/lbs, you do it by weight and moment arm, not a torque wrench...imagine the cost of 4-6' long torque wrench that needs to be regularly certified and calibrated above 600ft/lbs).
@Busted_Knuckles
@Busted_Knuckles Жыл бұрын
Refinery Inspector here- We would never use TTY on any bolted flanged connection. I have discussed TTY with multuple senior mechanical engineers in the same room and here's some thoughts: TTY is not used because of the amount of variables that are needed, contrary to the original thought of eliminating variables. The first initial TTY sequence is to torque to a low lbs then start the dial gauge. Problems arise with getting the first torque value correct. A small amount of thread damage, cleanliness, or calibration is off, it's exacerbated at the end and make the torque wildly off. In addition there is no ability to check final fit up. Finally, we have great success with hot torque of problem high pressure connections. Torque, run at operating temp for 12 hours, torque with the same values while hot. Love the video
@tjoyce81
@tjoyce81 3 ай бұрын
Just curious - When you "torque with the same values while hot", does the fastener move at all? Or, does the clamping force improve? Just thinking 'what if I could heat a motor up (somehow) and then torque the heads'...would that give me an advantage....mmm
@stevegarboden2437
@stevegarboden2437 Жыл бұрын
I've seen MANY! used TTY head bolts snap off while being reinstalled, they put new ones in the gasket set for a reason. Retorquing head bolts after a waiting period is to compensate for the head gasket relaxing, not the bolt.
@Joeameturexpert
@Joeameturexpert Жыл бұрын
In my industry we use 2 a490 3/4" fine pitch bolts with shouldered nuts to attach an assembly to our machine. We have to torque them to 425ft/lbs I can testify for the hammer method. We run them on with a 3/4 milwaukee impact. Then torque the nut, smack the bolt head briskly with a 3lb hammer then retorque.
@derekhobbs1102
@derekhobbs1102 Жыл бұрын
Got to love having an old Datsun L series with 40+ year old head bolts. Mainly because new bolts weren't viable when mine was built.
@robertlindsay9826
@robertlindsay9826 Жыл бұрын
I had mayby 10 when I was younger. So simple and economical. I miss those simple days
@MikkoRantalainen
@MikkoRantalainen Жыл бұрын
For re-using TTY bolts, I think you should measure the final torque for the new bolts + 90 degree and torque the used bolts to that with grease. That should get you as close to the original spec as possible with re-used TTY bolts.
@harleyhaynes
@harleyhaynes Жыл бұрын
The load loss you are seeing in the heated test, and the relaxed test is due to a differential in thermal expansion. The increase in bolt load is, in fact, causing an increase in embedment, gasket creep, and, most importantly, gasket stress (gasket crush). The gaskets do not recover well, so you will lose gasket stress and bolt stress when everything reaches soak temperature and then cools.
@billl7551
@billl7551 Жыл бұрын
Either a heat cycle or waiting 24hrs is for the torque relaxation due to head gasket compression, not metal creep, yielding of the fastener. I like your channel as many of the tests are very good, some could be improved. Stretch is strain in engineering terms and is based on the modulus of the material for the stress-strain relationship. Just stretch is not very meaningful as a comparison of different fasteners, but it is interesting. Permanent deformation (stretch) would be comparative if it was only based on the reduced diameter section.
@bigwangmark
@bigwangmark Жыл бұрын
The waiting 24h and retorquing makes sense at first but then you would think and hope the engineers that design them took that into account when giving the torque specs and as such you are already slightly over torquing the bolts to factor in the stretch and the final numbers are the correct torque figures needed. So waiting 24h and retorquing might just be over torquing the bolts and risking damaging the head gasket or bolts. Be interesting if your chan could contact a few bolt manufactures and see if they can let you talk to their engineers on that matter.
@pflaffik
@pflaffik Жыл бұрын
I reused bolts on a Lancer 1.5L, a Renault 5, and a bunch of Volvo 240. No issues. 99% sure my old Civic 1.6Vtec had reused bolts too after a valve change, it too had no issues for the 3 years it was used after that.
@jusamartin91
@jusamartin91 Жыл бұрын
Hey, Love your content! I was wondering if you knew what kind of friction coefficients car manufacturing uses when calculating requested torque values? I know different materils and coatings affect that, but do you have any idea? Another question. Any idea what kind of clamping forces are required in same field? Like for chassis bolts or cylinder head?
@lelandlewis7207
@lelandlewis7207 Жыл бұрын
When I torque a head, I lube the threads and under the head, except SB Chev which gets sealer on the threads, then I go through the pattern and steps counting each bolt so I know I didn't miss any. I then go back through the pattern loosening each bolt slightly, maybe 1\8 turn, and then pull it to torque again. Lastly, I start at one end and check each bolt to see that it is holding torque; I have had a few blocks where soft threads showed up during the last step, requiring Heli-Coils. If it is a TTY, I then pull the proper angle. This is how I was taught in my apprenticeship and I have never had a head gasket or bolt failure. Before the days of PermaTorque head gaskets, we would go through the run-in procedure to break in the cam, about 20 minutes, and then retorque the heads. I have never reused TTY bolts since stock replacements usually come in the kit or are cheaper than the repair if a bolt fails, which I have seen happen.
@cch201992
@cch201992 Жыл бұрын
The term for the hitting it with a hammer thing is called penning it's used to relieve the stresses mostly used in welding at a joint where the material can shrink when it cools
@TorqueTestChannel
@TorqueTestChannel Жыл бұрын
That'd be peening
@cch201992
@cch201992 Жыл бұрын
@@TorqueTestChannel ah yeah that's how it's spelled haha would be interesting to see you hit the bolt with a needle gun because that's something we would use it has alot more vibration 🤷🏼‍♂️
@roberthoffman4713
@roberthoffman4713 Жыл бұрын
Great video with some good information.
@GarageSupra
@GarageSupra Жыл бұрын
I Just started watching the video however, I have used lubricated ARP 2000 head studs in my 2JZGTE and didn't retorque after heat about 7 years ago and have had no issues with the MLS and single turbo upgrade. I think ARP takes this into account with their torque ratings for the 2000 series bolts. I would say the alloy in the head would be more of the stretch point if anything
@frosty9595
@frosty9595 Жыл бұрын
The video shows that retorquing isnt an issue.....
@pike7318
@pike7318 Жыл бұрын
Hello dear TTC team A German car enthusiast made some head bolts because the ARP ones weren't strong enough for him. They supposedly have a tensile strength of 270.000+ psi (1850 N/mm2/). They are called Pro Series Fasteners. Maybe you are interested in testing them.
@legros731
@legros731 Жыл бұрын
Arp custom age 625 plus bolt have a tensile strength of 260,000 to 280,000 psi And the Aermet bolt are rated at 290,000 to 310,000 psi So no is bolt are not better that arp just better that arp2000 bolt at 220,000psi
@magmomwise
@magmomwise Жыл бұрын
I have found that reusing the same bolts the engine was originally built with has never been a problem. Using a best practices of clean and flat mating surfaces along with proper bolt tightening pattern and stepped torquing has always giving me failure free results. All the failures of engines, gearboxes and structural items has been traced to exceeding load limits. Always use a good quality torque wrench and have it calibrated to maintain accuracy. I avoid using air or electric impact tool for assembly. It's too easy to over or under tighten fasteners with an impact wrench.
@kirilakmadjov8307
@kirilakmadjov8307 Жыл бұрын
You cant always rely on that as tty bolts undergo irreversible plastic deformation every time you yield them.Sure u can probably get away with reusing them few times but you cant reuse this bolt forever, personaly i wouldnt use it more than twice.
@matrix860321
@matrix860321 Жыл бұрын
Ph.D here MechE. Look up joint relaxation. Fastening engineers treat a fastening solution as a system, not the bolt by itself, and determine an appropriate success metric. The bolt by itself is just a component.
@tombeam
@tombeam Жыл бұрын
The directions that came with my 393W kit(from the mid 80s) said to run engine to temperature, leave overnight, then re-torque. Haven't had an issue yet.
@DrHarryT
@DrHarryT Жыл бұрын
I did an 05 Duramax with new TTY... Did the primary torque sequence and then the two 90 deg stages. One thing I noticed was that a few of the bolts went to the final 90 deg turn with less resistance than most of the other bolts. My brother was doing the final [I am an ASE certified veteran] 90 deg and wanted to go past the rotational point and I abruptly stopped him... NO! I suspect in those bolt holes there was some residual oil making them easier to turn. I told him that threads work, every bit you turn the bolt stretches the bolt more and more. Stop at the specified point and you have stretched the bolt to its spec. Leave it alone, it's got the proper clamping force and it's not going to magically unthread. So much for skimping out on the brake clean. He has a 1,000 miles on it now with no problems... So far.
@ovalwingnut
@ovalwingnut Жыл бұрын
I bolted to the computer when I heard about this test. I was hanging on my a thread util I found out wut was wut. It's true, Torque Test Channel testers are all studs. Just saying. Thanks so much.
@fascistpedant758
@fascistpedant758 Жыл бұрын
I'd say that if it took 94 lbs to torque the TTY bolts originally, that's probably the spec you should use for reuse on a well lubed bolt. I assume that factory specs have been tested to yield the best results. Waiting a day or hitting it with a hammer just changes the specs. If you want more clamping than factory specs, just torque them down more than specs to begin with.
@jimmydcricket5893
@jimmydcricket5893 Жыл бұрын
Cummins head gasket kits have a scale to measure head bolts against, very handy.
@nono-fn3zc
@nono-fn3zc Жыл бұрын
I was hoping to see a comparison between roughing up the arp washer on the “engine side” vs not. Steve Brule wrote an article that I mentioned on your original video.
@BOOT
@BOOT Жыл бұрын
ARP sells washers with dimples as well. Also depends on the surface finish under the washer, that metal he used didn't look too polished.
@njdevi11
@njdevi11 Жыл бұрын
My theory with TTY bolts is it's easier to get the "one and done" assembly at the factory. There's Bigger fudge factor with TTY bolts, so it's easier to get right rather than taking your time, to make sure everything is clean and lubricated and you hit the sweet spot. Also less of a need for consistency between bolts, and to go back over them after you do a torque sequence. I just did an engine with 12mm TTY bolts. They Ranged from 126 ftlb to 150ft-lb on the final 90* The manufacturer said it is ok to reuse headbolts if they have not stretched beyond a certain point.
@DeusTex-Mex
@DeusTex-Mex Жыл бұрын
Yes, also using torque alone to judge the clamping force applied by a non-tty bolt can result in wild discrepancies. Yet this method was utilized for almost 100 years prior to the widespread adoption of aluminum cylinder heads, which are pickier than iron. And while bolt torque values are important, even something as vital as a head gasket still has a surprising tolerance for error. Thus the million stories of "I did it my own way my whole life and never had a problem". Any resulting issues are likely to be very long-term, if they ever occur at all. Manufacturers need to have near-perfect repeatability, they can't have random head gasket failures at 100k miles.
@immikeurnot
@immikeurnot Жыл бұрын
IIRC, GM had a 4 cylinder engine that you had to run to temperature before finishing the torque sequence. But yeah, it's smarter just to do it the way the engineers told you to. They may be screwups on a lot of things, but not usually head bolt torque.
@thevictim2072
@thevictim2072 Жыл бұрын
I regularly reuse TTY bolts on components other than head bolts. I return the bolt to the original position or pick a torque specification based on the diameter of the bolt. I have reused head bolts a few times and use the same procedure.
@hardcore4476
@hardcore4476 2 ай бұрын
Thinking of reusing oil housing TTY bolts on 11 Jetta tdi 2.0L . Going back and forth and second guessing because Volkswagen says to replace. Think I’ll be ok to reuse? If so normal torque plus 1/4 turn?
@twicebittenthasme5545
@twicebittenthasme5545 Жыл бұрын
I always had wondered about that myth of hitting the bolts with a hammer. I recall many instances of having to to wait final assembly for the "tapping" of the head bolts with a hammer by the old mechanics when I was an apprentice so many eons ago. The very same reasons as noted were given for this procedure along with "seating" the bolt head as machining from other shops shouldn't ever be taken at face value. Always seemed to be an unnecessary step as I never saw or heard of any failures whether hit or not.
@ReefMimic
@ReefMimic Жыл бұрын
You you and project farm had a baby omg my my mind would explode
@elmadicine
@elmadicine Жыл бұрын
I have no idea what these are for, but it makes for great going to sleep material
@Kanglar
@Kanglar Жыл бұрын
I know you CAN, because I've done it. The question is: should you?
@Deneteus
@Deneteus Жыл бұрын
There is a way to heat that block to engine temp for testing that doesn't require a blowtorch. Just use cartridge heaters and a PT1000 RTD sensor with an ESP32 board. That would give you temp and time data for long term testing if you wanted.
@hotroddude6551
@hotroddude6551 Жыл бұрын
Excellent test. Now which one of you is a member on LS1Tech? We were just discussing this and I mentioned your channel.
@yodasbff3395
@yodasbff3395 Жыл бұрын
Interesting experiments. 👍
@MurphyTheBandChild
@MurphyTheBandChild Жыл бұрын
Most of these tips and tricks about putting engines together have been around as long as the automobile has, and most of them probably aren't needed when you take modern engine design and manufacturing techniques into account.
@jamesuzzle3143
@jamesuzzle3143 Жыл бұрын
65ft lbs is what we have always torqued sbc and ls heads to. Whether it was reusing factory head bolts or arp studs
@802Garage
@802Garage Жыл бұрын
Subaru has quite a torque sequence for their head bolts. On a mid 00s EJ25 It's basically, in a pattern: 21.4 ft-lb, 50.9 ft-lb, loosen 180°, loosen 180°, tighten 31 ft-lb, then 80 to 90°, then 40-45°, middle bolts another 40-45°. They make no mention of replacing the head bolts or a limit on reuse. They do specify to replace the head gasket. People reuse Subaru head bolts regularly with no ill effects. Would be fun to see you do some testing on them given all the whinging on the internet about Subaru head gaskets! The failures are generally unrelated to the bolts, as far as most people with knowledge are concerned. They were caused primarily by the gasket material used on naturally aspirated EJ25 engines.
@9HighFlyer9
@9HighFlyer9 Жыл бұрын
Man I'm glad I don't work on Subies. That's a ridiculously long procedure. If it works I guess it's the correct one, but it'd be tedious if I had to do that on the Ford V8s I work on.
@802Garage
@802Garage Жыл бұрын
@@9HighFlyer9 Try it someday. They are incredibly easy to work on in most ways. I prefer working on Subaru to any brand. Especially Ford. Funny enough, I have a technician friend who left a Subaru dealer to work for Ford. He was there something like 6-12 months and when Subaru offered his job back with a raise, he was so happy to go back. Simply because working on Fords was so much more complicated. Every brand has their downsides, of course. Keep in mind there are only 6 bolts per head. Would take a few minutes to do the full procedure. :D
@michaelallen2501
@michaelallen2501 Жыл бұрын
The hammer advice I was given was to take a soft brass punch and use that to hit the bolt head. Trying to shock it, not damage it. I doubt any of that matters but it sounds alot better than just swinging away at bolt heads with a hammer lol.
@fitzmorrispr
@fitzmorrispr Жыл бұрын
The factory manual for my land cruiser does not say that head bolts are single use, and only gives one torque procedure. It does give a minimum bolt diameter, and says to replace bolts if they won’t achieve the torque value or if they’re too thin Similar to the instructions for my brother’s 81 MB 300SD, bolts have a minimum diameter, can be reused until they get too small, ie stretch too much.
@harrybow09
@harrybow09 Жыл бұрын
Just one for you here for the temperature affecting torque. on my honda cg125 i always had to retourque the head bolts after i heat cycled the engine (after a rebuild) cause every time i forgot the head bolts would come loose after a short while and i would get stranded at the side of the road.
@bobc8694
@bobc8694 Жыл бұрын
I am a 3 generation mechanic and have built so many different types of engines over the years I couldn't even begin to count them.. but I do a lot of SXS engines mostly Polaris RZR and there snowmobiles as well. And with the amount of race engines I build with all the best parts.. I modify and build even more engines for the every day trail rider.. And I'm always looking for the best parts that are going to last the longest if it's maintained correctly. So with that said I have been testing the one time use only hard wear for a long time mostly on Polaris and some car stuff. And on Polaris I have found that a good amount of time you can reuse head bolts and some others. But it's time consuming to do so. Mostly checking them out.But I have come up with a process of checking the bolt and if it checks out good by my specks then I have a torque process for the bolts that has been back up since 2008 to 2016 by 30 engines that was part of the R&D from 2016 until now I have 90ish engines out there running around and 15ish of them with over 5 thousand miles on them.And my personal Polaris 08 RZR 800 that I bought with a bad engine with only 1500 hundred miles on it and that was the start of the R&D I sold that machine to a good customer of ours with about 15-16 thousand miles on it and at the beginning of this summer I was talking to him and he has over..30.. Thousand miles on it !!! Pretty crazy but he's retired and uses it all the time and he takes care of it just like I showed him how to do and what time frame to do different things to the machine ,air filter, oil and filter, just to name a few.. l am sorry this is so long and it doesn't have all the periods lol but I think most people will understand what I'm saying and I thought people would like to know if you take your time and think about it you can figure it out this post just let's you know that most of the bigger bolts will work just fine just don't torque to the degree part since it is now a normal pre stretched bolt TQ only have a great day... Bob...
@thomasallbee52
@thomasallbee52 Жыл бұрын
Some manufacturers tell you tty bolts can be used again if the threaded section hasn't deformed. This can checked by measuring dia. of threads across the middle and ends of threads, or a straight edge, thread pitch gauge or even a nut will thread on differently in a streached section getting sloppy or difficult to turn.
@madmatt2024
@madmatt2024 Жыл бұрын
Yep. Chrysler says just this in the service manual for their 3.6L V6.
@1977jelliott
@1977jelliott Жыл бұрын
The snapon electronic torque wrench and many others will display the finishing torque at the end of your angle sweep. Just an FYI
@TCFiveoh
@TCFiveoh Жыл бұрын
I re-used a TTY set of head bolts on a Ford 4.0 OHV. The only thing I did different was add 5 lb-ft on top of the factory spec 3 stage sequence to get the bolt to yield a little more on the stress vs. strain graph. This was at 120k miles and at 185k miles there was still no issue with that truck. IMO, It would have been a better comparison to do something similar to get the bolt to a "new" yield position further along the Sy hump. I feel torqueing it to the same spec as an un-used TTY bolt wouldn't guarantee the same load generated/tension in the fastener.
@77appyi
@77appyi Жыл бұрын
when i did the head gasket on my 93 200tdi landrover D1, the early landrover manual i found online says you can use the stretch head bolts 3 times which i have over the years and have had no head gasket problems and it is worked hard and is my daily.. however, a later landrover manual say you can only use them one time
@aleks138
@aleks138 3 ай бұрын
when you guys do the next round of testing, can you do class 12.9 bolts? mcmaster also has 12.9 threaded rod that would be cool to see
@aranhaydar9195
@aranhaydar9195 Жыл бұрын
Well done 👍
@adamrobledo3996
@adamrobledo3996 Жыл бұрын
Very good video
@chrissraceporting7055
@chrissraceporting7055 Жыл бұрын
Tty head bolts can be used if within a length range generally supplied by engine manufacturers like Hyundai and their terracan j3 engine.
@netmagi
@netmagi Жыл бұрын
great job!
@yogibarista2818
@yogibarista2818 Жыл бұрын
Glad to see you've stopped trashing dial gauges - that was really hard to watch before.
@maldo72
@maldo72 Жыл бұрын
interesting test great info thank you ..
@leehulbert927
@leehulbert927 Жыл бұрын
At approximately 6:40, there is a visible oil dropo on underside of gauge, left on screen. During the lets see if the bolt can be tightened after resting for 24 hours: since the intial tighteming wa a "running" torque, I think the re-tightening ashould also be a "running" torque, due to having to overcome friction to get the bolt moving.
@flamebeard10339
@flamebeard10339 Жыл бұрын
The hammer thing might help if there is a bit of grit in there that you gotta knock free.
@TC-V8
@TC-V8 Жыл бұрын
Regarding re-using TTY bolts - Rover engine official service manual had an head bolt length tolerance - if the head bolts where within a defined max length they can be re-used.
@ddegn
@ddegn Жыл бұрын
Apparently this is relatively common practice based on other comments I've read.
@E85_STI
@E85_STI Жыл бұрын
I for one am running ARP 625+ head studs because I have to for the build. They are very strong and are required for higher HP builds.
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