ewww..
Is that a jeep I see in the background?
LOL - was thinking the same thing!!!!!!!

ewww..
Is that a jeep I see in the background?


I bought new guides and seat inserts, and I am waiting on my machinist friend to get them on the CNC. I bought brand new genuine GM diamond precups and installed them. Once on the CNC they will get the guides drilled and reamed for replacements, the seat areas cut for inserts, and the deck will get flycut.
Oh well, at least I won't be worrying about reusing cracked cups.
Hurry up and finish yours so I can swipe it!

We also had to cut the guide bosses down to .312". This is enough to locate the rotators. The valve guide seals will go on the .500 guide inserts, which will stick up about a half inch above old cut down guides:



that's a nice air hammer, Where'd you get it?

Near enough. I chilled 'em in the freezer, then put them on an ice&salt slurry pack, which should theoretically be -40 or so. I was going to use dry ice & acetone, which is like -108F or so, but I didn't have any acetone left and I was too cheap to buy moreand did you really get them to -40?


Max- whats your recipe for the slurry you made

Awesome work Max! I just wish I understood what is going on exactly LOL.
I think your next project should be completely building your very own diesel engine from a block of steel.![]()
funny you should mention that........a magazine artice recently just profiled that. a guy machined his own cummins engine block from solid steel. I guess it makes 1900hp or something of that nature. now the billet rods are the weak link.
That's nothing new:
In the 80's I was always reading about guys that were building their own blocks and heads, even aluminum blocks with inserts and aluminum heads, intakes, pretty much everything from scratch, in their garage, and making amazing powers.
At the time it was corvairs and VW engines I was interested in.