Did not do that. The issue is a few hairline cracks on the block at a rear head stud. I installed a new head gasket anyway but it looks like it did not hold? I have a spare lock but it's a big job to tear everything down and do a rebuild. I know about block stitching and welding.This goes against my mechanical nature but I might try a last ditch effort just to see what happens and get one more summer drive before the tear down. Will get the head skimmed then I plan on V-ing out the tiny block cracks,cleaning everything out,installing JB weld (ya I know I hear everyone saying it wont work) loading up the area with red high temp RTV and installing a new head gasket with lots of copper gasket spray. Might even try Randall's 23 AWG wire trick on the gasket What have I got to lose? This is a true story: Years ago I had the bottom end of the motor rebuilt at a shop. A friend and I went to install the cylinder head and I noticed 2 hairline cracks at the rear stud. We loaded that area with RTV and installed the head. Drove the car for 20 years with no problem! Guess those cracks finally got a little bigger. What the heck I'm going to give it a shot.Did you get the head magnafluxed???White smoke is coolant in the combustion chamber.
There will also be bubbles in the radiator.
Mad dog
Under the intake only. Good compression in all cylinders.I don't think I am getting coolant into the cylinders.I think it's a head gasket leaking coolant to the atmosphere rather than leaking internally? I can't see any white smoke coming out of the rear of the head where the possible block hairline cracks are....cant feel or see any leakage there but looks like at some point there was some rusty residue on the block there. I suspect a gasket leak underneath the manifolds but I just can't make out where because of the smoke/steam.....maybe if I pull the manifolds I will see evidence there. I did put a pressure tester on the rad set at 4 psi and it was holding with engine not running.Next morning pressure had leaked out. Dont know if that's normal for a pressure tester to hold overnight or does pressur just dissipate over time?I may be confused...is the white smoke coming out of the tail pipe or from under the intake?
Randall's technique was to ensure the head gasket sealed well with the liners. He recommended it for the larger bores and did it on all his rebuilds, not just those with lower liners.
Copper is an interesting gasket material. If in the dead-soft state, it compresses well...but it also can flow with heat and time. When I was into RC model airplanes, the little high compression engines used solid copper gaskets. More than once I had an engine loose compression, and when I removed the head, the copper near the exhaust had pushed out. It looked like it was made that way.
I think the gaskets we normally use are copper covered composite, mainly to help prevent the copper from creeping like a solid copper gasket does. Adding an extra copper bead around the liners should improve the "crush" and help the combustion seal.