Hopefully I sound concilatory here on, as I cannot yet find the darn post I saw in 2003 on this matter. :!:
I'm still going through
Jimbo65's posts. Two conflict...1.55 SI exhasts were quoted as Jims final type. Could have been machined down, but 1.5" SI or Manley were initally recomended.
http://fordsix.com/forum/posting.php?mo ... st&p=41181
http://fordsix.com/forum/viewtopic.php? ... ght=#60119
:roll: I'm 105% positive that Number one exhast is critically thin on one particular Aussie 2v casting, and it wasn't due to core shift or quality assurance stuff ups, it was integral to the design.
:roll: I aditionally felt certian it was
Jimbo 65 who made the comment. His machinist said you cannot go up and maintain a good exhast seat to water gallery margin for an unleaded fuel engine in modern conditions with valves bigger than 1.45. It was written back in 2003, and I took note of it.
I'll have to recheck posts by
RickSmol,
Offenokee Comet or other guys who had there machinist comment on it.
I have a rule with leaded heads...never, ever run excessively large valve head diameters or thin valve seats and special minimised guides on the exhasts. You can make up for any issue with flow balance by lift or duration of the custom cam grind you use.
The 2V heads could even run smaller valves on the exhasts for safety, and you can come up with some higher lift rockers on the cylinders number one and six since the 1.6 and 1.75:1 roller rockers are actually FE items, which work as 1.5 or 1.65 ratios when on the I6. Use 1.5's on everything else.
Yank head machinists are very knowledgable, and have been dealing with valve seat recession for years, while we Aussies and Kiwis have only been unleaded since 1996 or so. We tend to push the envelope a bit harder because a 2V head is easier to find here than in the USA!