ARP Headstuds and the rocker shafts on an M30
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- Beamter
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- Beamter
- Posts: 23035
- Joined: Apr 08, 2009 10:30 PM
- Location: Charlottesville, VA
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Oh crap! Your right.mooseheadm5 wrote:Wait, which B34 head has 1 piece rocker shafts? I'm looking at the catalog and all I see are two piece, and that's what I remember from the last B34 I did.
<<<SNIPPED FOR WRONG INFORMATION>>>
Last edited by KillerPM on Oct 25, 2013 10:24 AM, edited 1 time in total.
And scrap that one piece... I went back to 1973 and they are all two...KillerPM wrote:Oh crap! Your right.mooseheadm5 wrote:Wait, which B34 head has 1 piece rocker shafts? I'm looking at the catalog and all I see are two piece, and that's what I remember from the last B34 I did.
Its earlier M30s that have a one piece...
Hmmm... My information source was incorrect...
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This, I like...LynnBilodeau wrote:http://e28-535i.com/upload/shaftlock.web1.jpg
Very simple solution.
If you want a little more peace of mind, you could drill into the shaft about .020" to sink the set screw. Probably not necessary.
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i have looked into having custom head studs made for my m30 application in a stronger material than the standard arp. something equivalent to arp's L19 material. the cost is extreme for one set but almost drops in half for the second set and so on. would anyone be interested in a higher quality set for some more money than arps? this would obviously be for extreme builds. let me know if you are.
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Re: ARP Headstuds and the rocker shafts on an M30
Bumping an old thread to ask for thoughts on another possible solution to this problem.
What if one were to wrap .008in (approximately .02mm) steel wire around the bottom 2-3 threads of the UPPER threaded portion of the ARP stud (lower enough to ensure non-interference with the nut) and below for another inch or so. The result would be a "thickening" of the surface of the ARP by almost exactly the desired .04mm.
By pre-bending the wire around a dowel just smaller than the 11.9mm ARP shaft, and careful placement, the wire would hug tightly to the ARP. The wire would look like a spring around the shaft.
To address the concern of the spring un-screwing itself from the bottom few threads and then falling down the shaft of the ARP, some length of the top of the wire could be straightened and crushed under the large washers beneath the top nuts.
The wire...
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0018N4GF8/ref ... YE82GK02HX
Maybe worky? Thoughts?
What if one were to wrap .008in (approximately .02mm) steel wire around the bottom 2-3 threads of the UPPER threaded portion of the ARP stud (lower enough to ensure non-interference with the nut) and below for another inch or so. The result would be a "thickening" of the surface of the ARP by almost exactly the desired .04mm.
By pre-bending the wire around a dowel just smaller than the 11.9mm ARP shaft, and careful placement, the wire would hug tightly to the ARP. The wire would look like a spring around the shaft.
To address the concern of the spring un-screwing itself from the bottom few threads and then falling down the shaft of the ARP, some length of the top of the wire could be straightened and crushed under the large washers beneath the top nuts.
The wire...
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0018N4GF8/ref ... YE82GK02HX
Maybe worky? Thoughts?
Re: ARP Headstuds and the rocker shafts on an M30
It's not a problem.Nosis wrote:Bumping an old thread to ask for thoughts on another possible solution to this problem.
Re: ARP Headstuds and the rocker shafts on an M30
Whew... that was easy!T_C_D wrote:It's not a problem.Nosis wrote:Bumping an old thread to ask for thoughts on another possible solution to this problem.