Yeah, Right, you somehow pumped so much gas into that engine that it washed the oil out of the EXHAUST valve guide!!
When is the exhaust valve stem ever going to see any fuel?
Its closed when there is fuel vapor in the cylinder. After the plug fires, all the fuel is going to burn. If its running rich, a lot of it will not get burned completely and will exit as carbon.
If you could somehow get enough fuel in there so that there was liquid left after the cylinder fired, you would have melted the cat if it has one, or you would have raw gas or flames coming out the tailpipe.
Show of hands how many folks have killed the ignition briefly and then turned it back on to make the car shoot flames out the pipe and scare the neighbors<G>.
I've had to replace two mufflers because of doing that.
Anyway....there is a simple answer to him when he says too much fuel. Just look at the cylinder walls.
If they are nice and smooth, it has not run that rich. One of the first things to go when you get fuel washdown is the film between the rings and the cylinder walls.
I've seen a bad carb score the cylinder walls in less than 200 miles.
No, the only, and I mean ONLY out I might see for this guy is for him to claim that the engine produced so much carbon that it somehow worked its way up between the valve stems and guides and reduced the clearance.
Never seen it myself, and you would have had to have problems seeing out the rear view mirror for the black smoke.
The plain fact of the matter is, either the heads ran real hot for some reason, or he did not ream the guides enough after he replaced them.
Most cases, the valve guides are pressed in. Which causes them to shrink inside slightly. Plus most are made a little small anyway to allow for final machining.
After the guides are pressed in, the valve stem is mic'ed and then the guide is reamed out to a certain amount over that size to allow for expansion when it gets hot.
Even if the guides are supposed to be the correct size for the stems, a good shop will ALWAYS mic the hole and the stem to make sure.
Tell him to dig out his hole gauge and Micrometer, and give you the amount of clearance in the best hole, or several of the holes.
I don't know off the top of my head what the clearance should be for that head, but I'll bet someone on the forum will know.
I checked out his site. He sure has some nice machines there.
Fairly precise.
He does brag about holding things to .0001. Which is pretty good for engines.
Of course, on some of the machines I have to work on from time to time, .00005, or as its sometimes called, " a half of a tenth" is considered sloppy.
And the most important thing to remember about having a very precise machine, is that if you tell it wrong, it will F*ck something up very precisely.
And, if its computer controlled, it will do it again and again exactly the same way.
Great machines are no substitute for good machinists. Or Machinists that are paying attention to what they are doing.
J.
Dang it, screwed up the font size, sorry, I'll try to do better next time.
Aha!! got it right that time!!
[SIZE=+2] [/SIZE]