pre plenum checklist

and im waiting till i get the $50 off $100 from advance to get a bogo o2 sensor!!
cheapest intake manifold bolts I've found:
http://stores.hi-potek.com/-strse-42...num/Detail.bok
Not bad, as shipping is included.
I coat the bolts with nickel anti-seize, and I mean thoroughly coated. The intake manifold bolts have a lot working against them, (crankcase blowby, dissimilar metals meeting and the bolts act as the bridge, etc.) and tend to corrode more quickly than just about anywhere else on the engine. The nickel anti-seize keeps the corrosive elements at bay, and keeps you from snapping a bolt later down the road if you should ever need to remove it again.
Follow the torque procedure carefully on the installation or you'll have leaks. Double or even triple check the bolts at the end and go very light on the torque wrench handle to get every last bit of that 12 ft/lbs on those bolts.
Use an inch/lbs torque wrench on the bolts, not a ft/lbs. Seen that mistake made before.
http://stores.hi-potek.com/-strse-42...num/Detail.bok
Not bad, as shipping is included.
I coat the bolts with nickel anti-seize, and I mean thoroughly coated. The intake manifold bolts have a lot working against them, (crankcase blowby, dissimilar metals meeting and the bolts act as the bridge, etc.) and tend to corrode more quickly than just about anywhere else on the engine. The nickel anti-seize keeps the corrosive elements at bay, and keeps you from snapping a bolt later down the road if you should ever need to remove it again.
Follow the torque procedure carefully on the installation or you'll have leaks. Double or even triple check the bolts at the end and go very light on the torque wrench handle to get every last bit of that 12 ft/lbs on those bolts.
Use an inch/lbs torque wrench on the bolts, not a ft/lbs. Seen that mistake made before.
cheapest intake manifold bolts I've found:
http://stores.hi-potek.com/-strse-42...num/Detail.bok
Not bad, as shipping is included.
I coat the bolts with nickel anti-seize, and I mean thoroughly coated. The intake manifold bolts have a lot working against them, (crankcase blowby, dissimilar metals meeting and the bolts act as the bridge, etc.) and tend to corrode more quickly than just about anywhere else on the engine. The nickel anti-seize keeps the corrosive elements at bay, and keeps you from snapping a bolt later down the road if you should ever need to remove it again.
Follow the torque procedure carefully on the installation or you'll have leaks. Double or even triple check the bolts at the end and go very light on the torque wrench handle to get every last bit of that 12 ft/lbs on those bolts.
Use an inch/lbs torque wrench on the bolts, not a ft/lbs. Seen that mistake made before.
http://stores.hi-potek.com/-strse-42...num/Detail.bok
Not bad, as shipping is included.
I coat the bolts with nickel anti-seize, and I mean thoroughly coated. The intake manifold bolts have a lot working against them, (crankcase blowby, dissimilar metals meeting and the bolts act as the bridge, etc.) and tend to corrode more quickly than just about anywhere else on the engine. The nickel anti-seize keeps the corrosive elements at bay, and keeps you from snapping a bolt later down the road if you should ever need to remove it again.
Follow the torque procedure carefully on the installation or you'll have leaks. Double or even triple check the bolts at the end and go very light on the torque wrench handle to get every last bit of that 12 ft/lbs on those bolts.
Use an inch/lbs torque wrench on the bolts, not a ft/lbs. Seen that mistake made before.
thanks for the tips. i'l take any and all i can get for when we start this. i'll have my lappy handy so i can pull up the forum if needed
cheapest intake manifold bolts I've found:
http://stores.hi-potek.com/-strse-42...num/Detail.bok
Not bad, as shipping is included.
http://stores.hi-potek.com/-strse-42...num/Detail.bok
Not bad, as shipping is included.







