More news...
I hate to piss on your Wheaties,but every chevy motor I put "new" heads on from another motor with a fresh valve job made the motor smoke like a chimmney past the rings!...one so bad,(a 305 Monza motor in my 71 K1500),I got ticketed for excessive smoking a day after the swap..I ended up putting a 350 in from another vehicle I got ..its a lot of work for nothing,and costed me 150 bucks to do the valve job myself at the machine shop in the parts store,plus head gaskets,etc..
Engine parts ALL wear together!..put ALL new parts in,no troubles..but do a "patch" job by only doing the heads, and not the rings and pistons will force the oil by all the worn parts !..when they are all equally worn oil consumption is not usually excessive enough to be visible as smoke,or it smokes only after startup,etc..
As suggested earlier,make sure the motor is worth all this effort,if you decide to swap heads,make sure the cam isn't flat,or there is no cracks in the valley area,etc...
Like I said earlier,I'd have used the screw in studs..I have never had good luck trying to install new press in studs,even when the heads are on the bench..always trash a few,even with the proper tools( which is nothing more than a LONG nut made of solid round stock with a blind hole in it,so the hammer wont muck up the nut or threads..)--what happened in your case happens 99% of the time when an oversized stud is attempted to be pounded into a "standard" size hole without being reamed to fit first....goes in halfway,then it stops,bends,or worse,cracks the head!..
I'd try a screw in stud,a torch will break the loctitie's grip,an oxy-acetalyne torch would be preferable to a propane torch ,but it might work..you can use a open end wrench on the tap,or an adjustable..they also sell "tap sockets" to fit a ratchet for places regular wrenches and "T" handles wont fit..take care to get the threads started STRAIGHT so the stud isn't crooked once its in there..a giude for the tap like a 3/8 drive socket over the boss might help keep it straighter..good luck,dont junk this motor yet,it'll probably live long after this is fixed!...
I hate to piss on your Wheaties,but every chevy motor I put "new" heads on from another motor with a fresh valve job made the motor smoke like a chimmney past the rings!...one so bad,(a 305 Monza motor in my 71 K1500),I got ticketed for excessive smoking a day after the swap..I ended up putting a 350 in from another vehicle I got ..its a lot of work for nothing,and costed me 150 bucks to do the valve job myself at the machine shop in the parts store,plus head gaskets,etc..
Engine parts ALL wear together!..put ALL new parts in,no troubles..but do a "patch" job by only doing the heads, and not the rings and pistons will force the oil by all the worn parts !..when they are all equally worn oil consumption is not usually excessive enough to be visible as smoke,or it smokes only after startup,etc..
As suggested earlier,make sure the motor is worth all this effort,if you decide to swap heads,make sure the cam isn't flat,or there is no cracks in the valley area,etc...
Like I said earlier,I'd have used the screw in studs..I have never had good luck trying to install new press in studs,even when the heads are on the bench..always trash a few,even with the proper tools( which is nothing more than a LONG nut made of solid round stock with a blind hole in it,so the hammer wont muck up the nut or threads..)--what happened in your case happens 99% of the time when an oversized stud is attempted to be pounded into a "standard" size hole without being reamed to fit first....goes in halfway,then it stops,bends,or worse,cracks the head!..
I'd try a screw in stud,a torch will break the loctitie's grip,an oxy-acetalyne torch would be preferable to a propane torch ,but it might work..you can use a open end wrench on the tap,or an adjustable..they also sell "tap sockets" to fit a ratchet for places regular wrenches and "T" handles wont fit..take care to get the threads started STRAIGHT so the stud isn't crooked once its in there..a giude for the tap like a 3/8 drive socket over the boss might help keep it straighter..good luck,dont junk this motor yet,it'll probably live long after this is fixed!...


Not sure why you quoted me.. My statement was in reference to the sludge varnish buildup.. Not any preventive maintenance...