TomT
Senior Member
I really hope they didn't just switch to a higher strength bolt without addressing the warping issue. I would much rather have a bolt break than to have a stronger bolt rip out the threads inside the head.
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You may be on to something here. What convinced about the science that this will work. Looks like they added material weight to mani plus high temp metalurgy, I totally subscribe to that.BD Diesel makes great manifolds to solve this problem. The hardware is better also. Makes sure you get the correct ones. Passenger side on DS & DT are not the same. Just replaced mine and yes, they are warped. Previous owner must have replaced them already because the bolts weren't factory and heat shields were missing.
Heftier and addressed snapping bolts by adding a collar to each bolt to allow expansion without snapping.You may be on to something here. What convinced about the science that this will work. Looks like they added material weight to mani plus high temp metalurgy, I totally subscribe to that.
For some reason the 6.4 option is not 50 state, but the 5.7 option is... shrugVery helpful @Jeepwalker to document all that work. Most people I know around here have done this.
Pretty sure bolt breakage is a 100% surety on Hemi engines. It's just a bad design. I explored long tube headers, but after researching the cost of the parts and install I decided against. I have a heavy duty with the 6.4 Hemi. This engine is sunk lower into the higher frame in the heavy duty and is harder to get at, so I had an indie shop with hoists remove the manifolds. Then got them machined flat and reinstalled. No problems since.
I also explored BD Diesel manifolds, but they lack the EGR port on the left bank. Rick tells me the 6.4 retained EGR for lower combustion temp for engine longevity. But of course the EGR cooler plugs up. How is an engine more "durable" by adding a failure mechanism? *sigh*
I'm a really old fart. I remember the days that cast iron in engine components held up for LONG times.I would definitely agree on the alloy composition......If we do prototype work and can't wait for the alloyed material like 8620.
Our parts will warp after machining from stress of the material removed.
Wasn't also around that time that GM also decided to convert thrier gasoline engine components to diesel???I'm a really old fart. I remember the days that cast iron in engine components held up for LONG times.
Then, in about 1977, GM decided to reduce dramatically the nickel content of engine blocks and cylinder heads.
The results were catastrophic... heads and block began cracking profusely, even though they were not overheated.
Now, I would think that whatever shavetail out of engineering school who enacted this wet dream would be summarily fired. But, given the bizarre nature of the greed of the shareholders, maybe the young engineer was promoted.
So, here we are nearly 50 years later, and whaddaya know?
He was definitely promotedI'm a really old fart. I remember the days that cast iron in engine components held up for LONG times.
Then, in about 1977, GM decided to reduce dramatically the nickel content of engine blocks and cylinder heads.
The results were catastrophic... heads and block began cracking profusely, even though they were not overheated.
Now, I would think that whatever shavetail out of engineering school who enacted this wet dream would be summarily fired. But, given the bizarre nature of the greed of the shareholders, maybe the young engineer was promoted.
So, here we are nearly 50 years later, and whaddaya know?
It's possible that is a holdover from the original mandates about electronic engine controls.For some reason the 6.4 option is not 50 state, but the 5.7 option is... shrug
Rams are not ‘GM” …so I don’t know that the scenario mentioned is either legit or applicable….Wasn't also around that time that GM also decided to convert thrier gasoline engine components to diesel???
We all know how that worked out. I had a buddy with a late '70s - early '80s Suburban 350 diesel. One day, a connecting rod decided to abort itself, right out of the engine and into the world.....lol
Engineer probably got promoted AND is running the company.......lol
Wow, really?Rams are not ‘GM” …so I don’t know that the scenario mentioned is either legit or applicable….
If you ever saw a Ford performance 9 inch differential, You'd see a 1 inch embossed "N" on the case. This is the signatory of a high nickel content cast iron casting for high horsepower/ torque capacity. A Chevy 350 engine block that was sought by racers, back in the day, had the numbers "010" cast into the rear of the block on top of the bell housing flange.Rams are not ‘GM” …so I don’t know that the scenario mentioned is either legit or applicable….
I remember the "old" cast iron parts of many things "way back when".Well, if you can save 50 cents worth of nickel per engine block, the savings across the run are enormous.
But, there could be disadvantages (and consequences), too. Ones that show up way later.
Doesn’t matter if it’s outsourced or made in USA. The manufacturers set the specifications that the product is made to.Perhaps because so much is sourced off-shore these days….
“Quality-Control” …is not simply checking/inspecting the product AFTER it’s completed. THAT activity is “Acceptance Inspection”.Doesn’t matter if it’s outsourced or made in USA. The manufacturers set the specifications that the product is made to.
I do not trust brands. Instead, I spend the time to do my research. Recently, I did a brake job with rotors on a 2010 Shelby GT500.
Shelby American's price for the "kit" or package was about 3 grand. Knowing that Brembo is the maker of those parts, I found them directly from Brembo for that particular application at roughly half the price of SA.
I did research on other brands, and found that they left out engineering data germane to the carbon content of the rotors and the friction co-efficiency indicator of the pads, and the so-called "pros" had no clue as to my need to know both Graphite (carbon) content AND the 2-letter friction code on the pads .
Inasmuch as this car was/is a race car with license plates, I wasn't given to any form of other than or lesser brake parts.
It was really an eye-opener how ignorant so-called parts pros were during my due diligence in finding the correct parts for this car, keeping in mind that it isn't just a "glorified Mustang" to quote several morons who looked up parts for this car.
The poor-minded "That'll do" mentality which drove those people to think that way is an eye-opening look into "conclusion bias" at it's very worst.
Believe it or not, O'Reilly's came through for me and special ordered the parts for me, but not without me setting an unshakeable boundary as to not settling for "That'll do" parts.