is this correct?
is this correct?
Was at the garage today and I heard someone ordering a tripple steel head gasket. After asking the owner what the hell a tripple steel head gasket was, he explained that people are usuing large head gaskets to increase the capacity of the cylinders. My question is can you get away with that without having to alter everything else to suit? I.E fuel, injectors and valves etc....
Trying my hand at web design!!
if you go OTT, it will lower compression ratio and retard the ignition timing.
i suppose its one way of restoring standard config if youve had the head skimmed quite a lot tho
he could have been talking about a triple layer metal headgasket tho, which is 3 slim metal gaskets, bonded in a few places. theyre stronger than the usual paper ones. i have a TTE one in my shed for when/if the head explodes on my GT4

i suppose its one way of restoring standard config if youve had the head skimmed quite a lot tho

he could have been talking about a triple layer metal headgasket tho, which is 3 slim metal gaskets, bonded in a few places. theyre stronger than the usual paper ones. i have a TTE one in my shed for when/if the head explodes on my GT4


Celica GT4 ST165 Sprint Special. GT3071@2.0bar
Re: is this correct?
boxy wrote:Was at the garage today and I heard someone ordering a tripple steel head gasket. he explained that people are usuing large head gaskets to increase the capacity of the cylinders
The capacity remains the same but the Compression ratio will be lowered
I think the theory goes that the increase in capacity (above the swept volume of the cylinder(edit)) enables you to compress more fuel air mix into the cylinder - usually associated with running higher levels of boost.
Perhaps some of the boys running big single tubbies on r32s can advise?
~Mark
Perhaps some of the boys running big single tubbies on r32s can advise?
~Mark
There's nothing that shouts "Poor Workmanship" more than wrinkles in the Gaffer tape.....
Re: is this correct?
That baffles me, the piston can only go so far into the cylinder (stroke). So if the cyliner is lengthened then surely the capacity is increased and the stroke stays the same. Also surely compression will be lower as teh piston does not compress a smaller volume of air or am I talking bollocks?GTRJazz wrote:boxy wrote:Was at the garage today and I heard someone ordering a tripple steel head gasket. he explained that people are usuing large head gaskets to increase the capacity of the cylinders
The capacity remains the same but the Compression ratio will be lowered
Trying my hand at web design!!
Surely that would be true in a NA application, where you are relying on the stroke to fill the capacity. But in a boosted application it is the boost that fills the capacity and this is down to volume?
Simple physics shows capacity = volume. Volume is increased by increasing the cylinder length, regardless of stroke.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volume
Simple physics shows capacity = volume. Volume is increased by increasing the cylinder length, regardless of stroke.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volume
'05 Subaru WRX 300
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'89 ST185 GT4
ONLY 370bhp & 405ft/lb @ fly
12.7s 1/4 @ 109mph in the wet
R.I.P.
R.I.P
'89 ST185 GT4
ONLY 370bhp & 405ft/lb @ fly
12.7s 1/4 @ 109mph in the wet
R.I.P.