Copper Head Gaskets
Copper Head Gaskets
I ran my newly built 1050 engine this week for the first time and it leeks!!! I had started it up first and ran it up just for a couple of minutes and then a few days later to adjust the timing and carb's and oil was leaking from the R/H upper head stud. In hindsight perhaps I should have re-torqued the heads after the first start up and not let my Pal strip the head off so hastily - but it's off. So when I put it all back together should I put the Copper head gasket back on dry or use a sealant such as Hylomar (do you have that in the US?) or perhaps Drei Bond as I shall have to buy a new tube of that for the base joint face.
Re: Copper Head Gaskets
thats a Copper habit
I'd use a high heat rubber sealer or a undrying other type................
a solid copper over the materal and steel BMW used...............THINK man THINK
I'd use a high heat rubber sealer or a undrying other type................
a solid copper over the materal and steel BMW used...............THINK man THINK
Re: Copper Head Gaskets
I've spent most of my money on women, motorcycles, and beer.
The rest of it I just wasted.
The rest of it I just wasted.
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Re: Copper Head Gaskets
We had copperheads where I grew up, but I never saw one with gaskets.
Ask the Indians what happens when you don't control immigration.
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Re: Copper Head Gaskets
Well, that would demonstrate the need, wouldn't it?
Sad to think of all those poor copperheads roaming around in your youth, all without gaskets...
Sad to think of all those poor copperheads roaming around in your youth, all without gaskets...
MS - out
Re: Copper Head Gaskets
I remember when I had my old Triumph, which used copper head gaskets. If I remember rightly, the procedure was to heat the head gasket to cherry red and then anneal it in motor oil and let it cool prior to use.
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Re: Copper Head Gaskets
Actually, the heating is the annealing process. The cooling process doesn't matter - unlike carbon steel, where slow cooling anneals while quick cooling hardens. So, while the oil dipping may have had some positive effect on the surface of the metal, you could cool it in water or just slowly air cool, and it would still be annealed.twist wrote:I remember when I had my old Triumph, which used copper head gaskets. If I remember rightly, the procedure was to heat the head gasket to cherry red and then anneal it in motor oil and let it cool prior to use.
MS - out
Re: Copper Head Gaskets
Any Copper head gaskets that I have seen for an airhead must be annealed to be installed–
squeaky clean surfaces all around AND sealed – I would rec a Hylomar spray.
squeaky clean surfaces all around AND sealed – I would rec a Hylomar spray.
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Re: Copper Head Gaskets
Locktite 601 was the factory recommendation on late model Triomph/BSAs .
Seems to have worked OK on my B44.
Seems to have worked OK on my B44.
Adelaide, Oz. 77 R75/7. 86 R80 G/S PD, 93 R100 GS, 70 BSA B44 VS ,BMW F650 Classic
Re: Copper Head Gaskets
I think the torque to properly seat a copper gasket would be greater than that to seat the composite OEM gasket.
Which might lead to stripping the case threads...No one has EVER done that, have they? (LOL)
Which might lead to stripping the case threads...No one has EVER done that, have they? (LOL)
Clemson, SC
R100s, R75/5
R100s, R75/5