bikinkawboy
Well-Known Member
I was reading some stuff on the internet (and we all know everything on the internet is true) and they talked about using '87-92 cylinder heads on older 360s. It appears the newer heads have the smaller valves (1.75" & 1.5") like the old 318 heads, but with the more effecient combustion chamber design, they will produce more power than the older 360 heads with their larger valves (1.8" & 1.6"). Supposedly they will swap without any modifications or changes and you can still use the older intake and exhaust manifolds.
I'm interested for a couple of reasons. The exhaust valves on my old 360 heads need to be replaced and while not unusable, there is play in the valve guides. Another plus is that the newer heads have hardened exhaust valve seats that should eliminate any possibility of valve seat recession from no-lead gasoline. Several years ago I had to replace the heads on the 318 industrial engine on my combine due to one valve on each head being terribly recessed. Funny that it was only one and on each head, with both being at the very end. I can't remember if it was at the same ends of the heads or at the same end of the intake manifold. So I figure that if I'm going to have to spend a chunk of money for valves and seat grinding on my old heads, I might as well invest in heads that produce more power and have hardened seats.
I'm interested for a couple of reasons. The exhaust valves on my old 360 heads need to be replaced and while not unusable, there is play in the valve guides. Another plus is that the newer heads have hardened exhaust valve seats that should eliminate any possibility of valve seat recession from no-lead gasoline. Several years ago I had to replace the heads on the 318 industrial engine on my combine due to one valve on each head being terribly recessed. Funny that it was only one and on each head, with both being at the very end. I can't remember if it was at the same ends of the heads or at the same end of the intake manifold. So I figure that if I'm going to have to spend a chunk of money for valves and seat grinding on my old heads, I might as well invest in heads that produce more power and have hardened seats.