tony barnhill said:
There were 4 types of cylinder heads fitted to USA market MGB's, casting #'s 12H906, 12H2389, 12H2923, CAM1106....some have smaller intakes & some have larger....some had smaller combustion chambers, other larger; some has dished pistons, some flat pistons...combined with their correct piston, some had 8:1 compression ration while others had 8.8:1.
The "X" head is casting number 12H1326 AFIH (never offered in North America)....as I understand it, the "X" has both larger intake & exhaust valves along with larger throats for both intake & exhaust valves....plus, the shape of the compression chamber is different and it has more capacity than heads offered here.
Plus, as I understand it, the pistons originally combined with the "X" head were shaped to help increase the compression from 8.8:1 (largest offered in US).
Caution, this is a really long winded "gearhead" post
The 12H1326 is the stock head for any MGB 1965-1968, it's that last of the 42cc closed chamber pre smog heads to come to America. More than likely rather than your "X" being some magic special performance head, it's just the home market head. Begining in 1968 in the US we saw the introduction of the smog punp with the 12H2389 cylinder heads and it's smog pump air rail injection ports, keep im mind the US was the only place the smog pump was required, so more than likely, the X head was for everyone else, it should be easy enough to find about form a Brit who knows his home market MGB engines. Aslo it imortatant to mention, US was the primary market for these cars, about 70% of all them ended up here, so we have way more of them than the Brits do, heck the reason MG wnet out of business was because the US market, the dermise of the convertible, ever growing emission laws, the growing popularity of Japanese cars. Therie car never got the dreaded single ZS and single intake/exhaust manifolds, they had twin HIF4s, just like their Midget 1500 all got twin HS4s carbs set up, they all got rubber bumpers, becuse since the US was the primary market, it was cheaper just to give everyone the RB cars, than have different chassis, but the rest of the world didn't get any of the smog crap. At this poit they were spending alot of money trying to make their cars faster, factory racing was dried up by 1978, and for the most part the company was on life support. My bet is all the X heads are, are UK and world market (other than US) cylinder heads,the and the reason a few of these head ended up hear is more than likely these heads got gobbled up the aftermarket, and offered as new replacement heads for MGB in the US with cracked heads.
Here's run down of US MGB heads
12H906 1964-1965 42cc closed chamber heads, .400" deep combustion chambers, pre smog,1.5625" intake and 1.343" (1.343" exhaust valve were used in the entire MGB production run, no other size exhaust valve was ever used by the factory)Thes heads used the wide collets, and cotters on the valve hardware. These heads were fitted on engine using the shallower 8.8 to 1 dish pistons.
12H1326 1965-1968
These heads were pretty much the same head as the 12H906, just casting improvements were made, valve sizes, collet style, hardware all remained the same. 8.8 dish piston were used
12H2389 1969-1971.
This was the begining of the smog heads, so this is the first head you see with the smog pump injection holes. These heads are also 42cc .400" deep closed combustion chambers. These heads also used the 1.5625" intake valve. This head is also the first MGB head to use the new narrow collet valves and hardware. All MGB heads for the US market from this point on had smog pump injection ports. 8.8 dish piston were used
12H2923 1972-1974.5
This the first of the open chamber 38cc .375 deep combustion chambers heads. This is also the head that folks referred to as the
"big valve heads" as the intake valve size was increased to 1.625". Because of the shallower combustion chamber this is first MGB head to require exhaust valve cut outs in the block, these engines were fitted with the deeper dish 8.0 to 1 dished pistons.
CAM1106 1974-on
This head was also a 38cc .375" deep open combustion chamber head, they went back to the 1.5625" intake valve, they also move the oil feed in the rear rocker arm predestal form center to offset and this head require a new offset rear rocker arm pedestal.
Other heads that made it to the US either as factory or cast iron aftermarket replacments.12H4743, exact copy of the CAM1106.
12H4736, I recntly rebuilt one of these, they are mechanically exact to the CAM1106, but the other casting was much smoother, and thes heads wwere over all better casting, much less likely to find one of these uncracked than a CAM1106
OK, on to the piston, there were really only tow piston, compression ratio wise ever used from the factory the the 8.8 top 1 shallow dish pistons used up to 1971, and the 8.0 to 1 depper dish pistons used form 1972 on, now it reasonable to think that a 8.8 tom 1 piston may have been used for the home market form 1972 on, due to lack of emission laws to deal with outside the US. And it alos noteworthy to menation most 18V replacment piston used these day, County, AE are offered in 8.8 to 1 dish. I know of no factory flat top piston ever offered. There are no real records showing any uprated MGB engine within the years of production, in otherwords no engine options within a given year, we pretty much all got the same stuff, after the smog stuff, the hoime market engines were still kept to the pre US smog standards, but thats about it.
It would be interesting to flow a X head on my flowbench to see if it flows better than any of the other stock heads, mainly because I build a few SCCA limited prep 1800 race engine, in SCCA limited prep engine rule, head porting is not allowed, so the hot ticket is flow as many stock heads as you can get your hands on and find the best flowing heads, at this point no one has done alot of this, because in G p[roduction the LP MGB was a dog, but now moved to H production, this dog has new life, and we may see some more interest, but we're still talking a small market. What we found about A-series stock heads flowing them, that they was more than one foundry, and some foundry's heads flowed beter than other, most it has to do with the size of the valve guide humps, and even within the "good" we see better and wrose examples. For the performance street I don't see the X head beiong a big deal, because any head can be made great with a die grinder and decking, and I see no great market for unported head for the street for any other reason than repalcing cracked heads.
So Bob, Tony if one of you want to loan me a cleaned X head for flow testing, I should be ready to do this by late june early July, then maybe we can all learn something.
Oh last but surely not least, most of the head casting number information needs to be credited to Sean Brown at Flowspeed,
www.flowspeed.com Sean has compiled some great info about MGB heads on his site.