I've got two 258 powered vehicles with aftermarket aluminum valve covers and they're both currently leaking. About 2 years ago my mechanic put the new valve cover in the Eagle with a cork gasket and it never really set 100%.
I'm not crazy about the cork gaskets, is there anything else out there you guys have had good luck with? I will be doing this myself so it's done right this time.
I have always used the cork, someone may have had better luck with something else
I am also VERY liberal with the RTV stuff, both sides. Plus I have found it helpful to let everything cure for a day before running it
AND, the biggest thing is not to tighten the bolts too much, its very hard to resist cranking them just a little more, at least for me it is, I just get them barely snug
Has worked on every AMC I have ever owned and they dont leak!
I have a clifford aluminum valve cover and I know they recommend not using a rubber gasket because it can cause the valve cover to crack when you're tightening it down. I used a cork gasket but I only have 1000km on my car since the motor was rebuilt.
I prefer the cork as well. A tip I have is to clean the mating surfaces well, use denatured alcohol to remove all the oil from them before applying RTV. Then you fit everything together and wait 24 hours before tightening it down.
Oil and RTV are enemies.
When I had 258 powered cars I ran no gasket and the right stuff nice solid bead made it work.
Quote from: BenM on April 03, 2013, 12:32:46 PM
I prefer the cork as well. A tip I have is to clean the mating surfaces well, use denatured alcohol to remove all the oil from them before applying RTV. Then you fit everything together and wait 24 hours before tightening it down.
Oil and RTV are enemies.
I'm guessing the dude I had put this valve cover on didn't prep it right. I usually go overkill on the prep work for cork gaskets.
Quote from: mach1mustang351 on April 03, 2013, 04:40:17 PM
When I had 258 powered cars I ran no gasket and the right stuff nice solid bead made it work.
I've heard good things about that stuff. Where do you get it and is it pricey?
I also discarded the cork gasket that came with my valve cover and used "the right stuff".
No leaks.
Quote from: Zoro on April 03, 2013, 05:50:48 PM
Quote from: BenM on April 03, 2013, 12:32:46 PM
I prefer the cork as well. A tip I have is to clean the mating surfaces well, use denatured alcohol to remove all the oil from them before applying RTV. Then you fit everything together and wait 24 hours before tightening it down.
Oil and RTV are enemies.
I'm guessing the dude I had put this valve cover on didn't prep it right. I usually go overkill on the prep work for cork gaskets.
Quote from: mach1mustang351 on April 03, 2013, 04:40:17 PM
When I had 258 powered cars I ran no gasket and the right stuff nice solid bead made it work.
I've heard good things about that stuff. Where do you get it and is it pricey?
You can get it at most parts stores. Its more spring than typical etc but isn't bad when you consider you're not buying the gasket. I seem to remember the small caulk style tube being like $20
First after cleaning the head I applied a bead of the right stuff on the head and then placed the cork gasket on top of it.I then put a bead on the aluminum valve cover and placed it down on top of the gasket. I found it a lot easier to put the gasket on the head verses trying to put it on the valve cover first and then trying to position in over the rocker arms without messing up the gasket. Once I had the valve cover in place I put the bolts in finger tight then used a quarter inch socket set to snug the bolts plus a quarter turn. That was six or eight months ago and although the eagle has not been driven sense then it has been running several times and have had no leaks. I do think that the right stuff is a little pricey but hey you get what you pay for and in this case and every other case that I have used it ,it works so I'm not complaining.
Quote from: BenM on April 03, 2013, 12:32:46 PM
I prefer the cork as well. A tip I have is to clean the mating surfaces well, use denatured alcohol to remove all the oil from them before applying RTV. Oil and RTV are enemies.
I really think that's the key. When we did mine we made absolutely certain all the old silicon was removed and cleaned the head and valve cover with paint solvent/gun wash prior to laying down fresh silicon and putting it together.
I used the Right Stuff before I broke my shoulder and never had problems with it. I tried 3 times to seal my current Clifford cover with it and couldn't, so I ground off the lip and used a cork gasket. No leaks anymore!
After reading the responses I'm thinking I'll go with that "right stuff" and no gasket.
Any other advice besides a ton of prep work?