If that is indeed an o-ring, I would love to know what the mounting bolts were torqued to
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07-02-2014, 05:14 PM | #2583 (permalink) |
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I've notice in the applications I have dealt with that they will fray and crack, but that is really extreme.
What applications have you seen this if you don't mind me asking? I've mostly worked on fruitland pumps
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07-02-2014, 05:18 PM | #2584 (permalink) | |
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07-02-2014, 05:47 PM | #2585 (permalink) |
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My Avalon has a melted gasket like that, and there was 1 more recently, but I have been racking my brains out trying to figure out what it was on... Can't remember
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07-02-2014, 06:03 PM | #2586 (permalink) |
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yes I have to take a better picture of the o rings when I get home at 11pm est. I have given them plenty of time to look at the issue before the post as well offered to send the manifold in for them to swap out at the least, but its out of warranty we'll just wait till something bad happens to someone else before we look further into it. LETS GO GM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! the manifold gaskets was a second issue they they have found after we noticed the water leak, then its all about the manifolds lol
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07-02-2014, 06:05 PM | #2587 (permalink) |
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also an email
On Jul 1, 2014 5:26 PM, Trent Noller <tnoller@stillen.com> wrote: Charles, I can see the confusion. The warped throttle body area is just another issue I found. I am not saying that this caused the issue with the intercooler core. I am still unsure as to what caused the intercooler core to start leaking. In regards to your previous email asking about the O-ring: Our O-rings are one piece and you can tell in the first picture I have attached that someone filled in the groove with RTV on your manifold. The pressure from the two pieces can make it look like one solid ring even if it’s not. The second picture I have attached shows what our O-ring looks like. It does not get deformed like in your pictures. This is fairly difficult to explain, but I’m just trying to help you make sense of the whole situation. Thanks, Trent |
07-03-2014, 09:55 AM | #2589 (permalink) |
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Well....
The best I can think of is that the gasket was not the proper one for the machined face or they were placed incorrectly. On machined faces, the mating surfaces are supposed to be designed for certain specs. These rings were probably off set from where they were supposed to be or placed in backwards? Upside down? Anyways, looks to me they werent seated properly before being torqued down. I will admit, most of the times you will notice a leak right away, and will see a nick or notice the ring is not seated properly. How it could have gone so long without leaking can only be over torque in my mind. However, stranger things have happened.
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07-03-2014, 11:07 AM | #2590 (permalink) |
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agreed but everyone keeps talking about the rings which was never the issue the issue Im looking for opinions on is the fact that Stillen's failed equipment which caused my engine to hydro lock. The rings never leaked or was an issue
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07-03-2014, 11:20 AM | #2591 (permalink) |
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I have been informed that a few people have questions regarding my original post and that I may not have been very clear in how the O ring seats so I want to elaborate a little bit further.
When tightened, O rings compress. That is why you use them. This compression allows for a tight seal and in the case of a throttle body connection you want to avoid any air leaks, hence the reason for the O ring. When engineering an O ring groove such as we have in the intake manifold. it is important to know the rate at which the O ring compresses. You don't want the throttle body to just sit on the O ring, yet you don't want to overtighten and crush the O ring either. If a foreign object or additional sealant is introduced into the channel that the O ring sits in this will cause excessive pressure as the O ring and the CNC machined channel were not designed to have something else in their space. Think of the saying 10 pounds in a 5 pound bag. The additional material has to go some where and it's going to follow its path of least resistance which is the thinnest part of the casting, hence the images you see where the aluminum is either cracked or warped from the pressure built up from the RTV silicone. Another question had come up regarding the amount of torque that had been applied to the bolts. Keep in mind that this is a cast aluminum intake manifold with 4 6mm bolts attaching the throttle bodies. There isn't much torque in this application. |
07-03-2014, 11:34 AM | #2592 (permalink) | |
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Excellent textbook answer. Being aluminum, you would hope there wasn't much force applied.
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07-03-2014, 11:51 AM | #2593 (permalink) |
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Looking at that cut in the ring suggests to me that it might have been installed incorrectly to begin with and leaked... at which point someone might have pulled it back off and put RTV on it to seal it. I still do not see how, if the RTV was not set up, it would do that damage. The least line of resistance is for the excess RTV is to squish out of there. To me is looks like possible improper torque there as well.
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07-03-2014, 11:51 AM | #2594 (permalink) | |
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07-03-2014, 12:41 PM | #2595 (permalink) |
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when round orings go square with frayed edges it is almost a sure sign of to thick of a ring or too shallaw of a groove, o-rings need only have 10-20% compression on a face seal so if it were a 2.0mm oring it needs a groove that is 1.7mm deep. Since it is a low pressure application it really need be only 10% if it were for the oil system then i would say 20-25%
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