Yeah, that's a good concern! Temps will be in excess of 600° coming out the port. Could you go to 1/4" for the top? I don't think you'll eat through or melt the plate, but warpage will be a concern that I didn't consider when I replied. You've put a lot more thought into it, more than the 10 minutes I did before replying! --------- Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 20:52:34 -0800 From: tom jennings <tomj@xxxxxxx> On Sun, Feb 7, 2010 at 08:41, Frank Swygert <farna@xxxxxxx> wrote:
Just the opposite -- sounds well within reason. I don't think I'd worry about the furnace cement though. Since the insert will stay in place by shape, don't worry about a little exhaust gas or heat rising into that well. You main concern is flow, right? At anything above idle exhaust gas velocity will be increased to a point that a small "crack" along the leading edges of the insert won't matter.
Actually I was more concerned with heat, eating the relatively thin (3/16") steel roof filler plate. I figured with hot gases on only one side the metal wouldn't cook. Cast iron has poor heat transfer and is much larger mass and has a water jacket under it. My steel roof will be thn and right in the exhaust. I also figured if it warped from heat then it could lift up and get hotter/warped-er... because I'd like this to be a one-shot deal and not do some long term development I prefer gross overkill. But I might just weld the three pieces in-place and be done. Tabs welded to the plug and a ver small milled notch on the head would let the manifold retain it and only reduce the gasket area 1/8" on two small spots. -- Frank SwygertPublisher, "American Motors Cars" Magazine (AMC)
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