I glued my 195.6 exhaust manifolds on with a thin layer of red silicone, the hi-temp stuff. I also had the machine shop grind the manifold flat. I didn't check it for flatness first though. I have some others in hte pile I will check when I get a round tuit. I used a thin layer and let it cure overnight before I ran it. The 232 exhaust (and intake) manifolds love to curl up with age and use, in my experience, so given an opportunity to grind the 195.6's flat I just did it. All this stuff is now so old nothing can get overlooked anymore. It took a few years to get over, but I no longer treat this stuff like "car repair", it's now "vintage engine research". It was tough. I've been driving/working on AMC stuff since the 1970's when they were "new", then later "used cars", etc. I'd once bought a '76 Hornet new off the dealer lot. As familiar as that chassis is to me, it is 34 years old, an unknown brand and engineering style to 90% of the world now! -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://list.amc-list.com/pipermail/amc-list-amc-list.com/attachments/20100525/999cecaa/attachment.htm> _______________________________________________ AMC-list mailing list AMC-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://list.amc-list.com/listinfo.cgi/amc-list-amc-list.com