yeah, I was wondering if the exhaust manifold gasket, that
comes in the FelPro set, is of the same material as the FelPro
header gaskets that Don uses? I've only 'seen' the Poly gaskets
for the stock manifolds, that FelPro makes. I've heard of aluminum
and some of the other copper type ones,,, I'm just not sure? I'd
like to
use the FelPros, when I install the Spitfire headers I have for my
Poly.
the FelPro Poly gaskets do have that heat shield, that seems like
a good thing,
to help with the higher heat that headers produce. so,,, even more
shielding
with two on each side. right.
Schuyler 62 Dodge Dart 440 wagon w/ Poly 318
<http://www.1962to1965mopar.ornocar.org/ml-wrobel62.html>
FYI - I Do the Decal designs for the Poly head 318 and more! email
me with your needs -
<sky62@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
On May 27, 2008, at 7:29 PM, Richard Kinsley wrote:
You should be OK without the heat riser. They are best
open not closed. Regarding gaskets, it was mentioned
on the 62-65 chatroom that the best way to seal and
prevent ex manifold leaks is to use two (2), FelPro
gaskets per side. If I were you that's what I'd do.
Rich Kinsley '64 Dodge Polara 4dr 318poly w/goodies
======================================================
--- Paul Hoffmeyer <paulhmopar@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Hi, guys;
>
> I'm getting ready to put the exhaust manifolds on my
> poly and need some
> input. The heat riser valve is stuck open and the
> spring is missing
> anyway. Other than cold start driveability in
> January here in
> Wisconsin, what if any problems would I have just
> leaving it in the open
> position? Secondly, how much warpage will the
> head-to-manifold gasket
> take up? If I hold one end tight to the head, the
> other end has about
> a .040" gap, the center two runners being higher
> than the ends. I have
> the Felpro gaskets, which seem to be a composition
> type.
>
> What are your thoughts on this? Thanks for the
> help.
>
> Paul H
>
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