Tons of Exhaust Manifold Leaks
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- Subzero
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Tons of Exhaust Manifold Leaks
My exhaust manifold gaskets are not the right size, something I noticed before I bought the truck. They were bound to leak but now they leak. It is only the passenger side, the drivers side manifold does not leak but I'm sure it will follow soon enough. The bolts are badly rusted and one is pushed right through the entire mount and is secured with a nut on the other side. Will most likely need a torch to break them loose. Will the leaks do any damage to engine parts? The spark plugs got hit pretty bad by the leaks till I put a longer boot cover plug set on them. Any good gaskets to buy?
1972 F100 Sport Custom-2WD, Aqua Blue and Wimbleton White, LWB, 302 V8 and C4 trans, P/S, P/B - under construction
Gone but not forgotten: 1968 F100 Ranger- 2WD, LWB, original rebuilt 360 V8, Autolite 2bbl carb, C6 Trans, Hedman Headers, Powermaster Racing Starter, H-Pipe and Glasspacks, P/S, P/B, A/C
Gone but not forgotten: 1968 F100 Ranger- 2WD, LWB, original rebuilt 360 V8, Autolite 2bbl carb, C6 Trans, Hedman Headers, Powermaster Racing Starter, H-Pipe and Glasspacks, P/S, P/B, A/C
- HIO Silver
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Re: Tons of Exhaust Manifold Leaks
Look into Remflex gaskets.
Prolonged exhaust leaks can erode the mating surface where it leaks. 'Had one on my 70 that the PO never fixed and the metal was gne from where it was leaking.
Prolonged exhaust leaks can erode the mating surface where it leaks. 'Had one on my 70 that the PO never fixed and the metal was gne from where it was leaking.
70 F100 LB 2WD, 360FE, E-Street EFI, TKO-500, 76K original miles.. follow my rebuild: The Lo-Buck Bumpside
71 F250 LB, 2WD, 360FE, T18, PS, PB, D60 with 4.11s
73 F100 SB 4WD, 390FE, NP435, +4 on 35s
01 Ferrari 360 Spider F1
01 F150 SuperCrew Lariat 4WD
01 PT Cruiser Limited (DD)
68 Mustang
65 Mustang
71 F250 LB, 2WD, 360FE, T18, PS, PB, D60 with 4.11s
73 F100 SB 4WD, 390FE, NP435, +4 on 35s
01 Ferrari 360 Spider F1
01 F150 SuperCrew Lariat 4WD
01 PT Cruiser Limited (DD)
68 Mustang
65 Mustang
- BobbyFord
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Re: Tons of Exhaust Manifold Leaks
If you ever have the heads off of the motor, have the exhaust side of the head milled, the exhaust manifolds milled flat and assemble with no gasket. If you use grade 8 bolts and grade 5 washers, it'll last forever.
- Subzero
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Re: Tons of Exhaust Manifold Leaks
Thanks for the help, the leaks started about a month ago and will be fixed by June. Would that fall under prolonged leaks? I plan to have the engine rebuilt in comming years but for now I'm going to try and make it last as long as possible. If they are milled flat, should sealer be used or nothing? Should sealant be used on the gaskets too?
1972 F100 Sport Custom-2WD, Aqua Blue and Wimbleton White, LWB, 302 V8 and C4 trans, P/S, P/B - under construction
Gone but not forgotten: 1968 F100 Ranger- 2WD, LWB, original rebuilt 360 V8, Autolite 2bbl carb, C6 Trans, Hedman Headers, Powermaster Racing Starter, H-Pipe and Glasspacks, P/S, P/B, A/C
Gone but not forgotten: 1968 F100 Ranger- 2WD, LWB, original rebuilt 360 V8, Autolite 2bbl carb, C6 Trans, Hedman Headers, Powermaster Racing Starter, H-Pipe and Glasspacks, P/S, P/B, A/C
- BobbyFord
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Re: Tons of Exhaust Manifold Leaks
Once everything is milled, you assemble metal to metal, no sealant or gaskets. I did the 390 in my 63 about 10 years ago, still has no leaks.
- hotrodfeguy
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Re: Tons of Exhaust Manifold Leaks
I have found most of the time the Exhaust manifold side burns first. But Bob is right it can happen. But with the liquid cooling in the head side it takes longer. Als long as your at it when your pulling the exhaust side manifold off have that milled down I bet that was the issue. Or this is a good time to upgrade to Headers.
http://www.summitracing.com/parts/big-1 ... odel/f-100
http://www.summitracing.com/parts/big-1 ... odel/f-100
1972 F-250 4X4 390
1999 F-350 7.3 PS 4X4
1996 Ford ranger 3.0
1999 F-350 7.3 PS 4X4
1996 Ford ranger 3.0
- Subzero
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Re: Tons of Exhaust Manifold Leaks
I wish I could buy headers and something to replace the rusted out duals on the truck but I'm tight on money right now so manifolds will have to do. I plan to have the exhaust replaced this year but it will be something low cost.
1972 F100 Sport Custom-2WD, Aqua Blue and Wimbleton White, LWB, 302 V8 and C4 trans, P/S, P/B - under construction
Gone but not forgotten: 1968 F100 Ranger- 2WD, LWB, original rebuilt 360 V8, Autolite 2bbl carb, C6 Trans, Hedman Headers, Powermaster Racing Starter, H-Pipe and Glasspacks, P/S, P/B, A/C
Gone but not forgotten: 1968 F100 Ranger- 2WD, LWB, original rebuilt 360 V8, Autolite 2bbl carb, C6 Trans, Hedman Headers, Powermaster Racing Starter, H-Pipe and Glasspacks, P/S, P/B, A/C
- HIO Silver
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Re: Tons of Exhaust Manifold Leaks
There's a guy over in FTE with FE headers up for sale: http://www.ford-trucks.com/forums/12897 ... st13931831
70 F100 LB 2WD, 360FE, E-Street EFI, TKO-500, 76K original miles.. follow my rebuild: The Lo-Buck Bumpside
71 F250 LB, 2WD, 360FE, T18, PS, PB, D60 with 4.11s
73 F100 SB 4WD, 390FE, NP435, +4 on 35s
01 Ferrari 360 Spider F1
01 F150 SuperCrew Lariat 4WD
01 PT Cruiser Limited (DD)
68 Mustang
65 Mustang
71 F250 LB, 2WD, 360FE, T18, PS, PB, D60 with 4.11s
73 F100 SB 4WD, 390FE, NP435, +4 on 35s
01 Ferrari 360 Spider F1
01 F150 SuperCrew Lariat 4WD
01 PT Cruiser Limited (DD)
68 Mustang
65 Mustang
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Re: Tons of Exhaust Manifold Leaks
Bobbyford is right, no gaskets is the way to go if the surfaces are flat & smooth. I have a 79 F150 with the original 400 engine. It never had gaskets from the factory and I have had the manifolds off twice. 400,000 miles & never had a leak. Most people think that every exhaust manifold needs gaskets, but that is not true. Sometimes I wonder if gaskets can do more harm than good--leaks, rust, corrosion, warped manifolds. Not sure, just sharing my experience on the topic.
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- Blue Oval Guru
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Re: Tons of Exhaust Manifold Leaks
The FE exhaust manifolds seem to warp worse than any others ive ever come across.
U could try some no leak/no retorque header gaskets (cant remember the brand i used), i never tried them on my truck with the 360 underhood but they havent leaked even a little on 2 different motors
(they outlasted the 1st motor)
On the 360 i was goin thru gaskets every 2-3 months until I started using header gaskets slatthered with a ton of high heat anti-seize...that lasted 4-5 months..high heat rtv helped on headers but not on exhaust manifolds
U could try some no leak/no retorque header gaskets (cant remember the brand i used), i never tried them on my truck with the 360 underhood but they havent leaked even a little on 2 different motors
(they outlasted the 1st motor)
On the 360 i was goin thru gaskets every 2-3 months until I started using header gaskets slatthered with a ton of high heat anti-seize...that lasted 4-5 months..high heat rtv helped on headers but not on exhaust manifolds
- still got my first first car 20+yrs later : 69 f100 sorta kinda pretending its a Mercury M100 w/a 70 f350 sport custom cab (factory buckets) 67 grille with 69 ranger cooneyes 68 merc box and hood,some supercool fiberglass fenders i scored way back when, 76 f150 disc brake frontend..currently running a 90 5.0HO 4bbl/c4 auto & 3.50 posi...originally a 360/c6 f100 Ranger with dealer added towpack (incl. kelsey hays trailer brake),boxside toolbox,behind the seat stowage & belly tank...only original parts left on 'er are the frame,rear end,rear springs,and rear bumper...
- Ranchero50
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Re: Tons of Exhaust Manifold Leaks
Ditto, no gaskets. Maybe a slathering of Permatex ultra RTV and pick up a box of NordLocks for the bolts.
Heat cycling and felt gaskets just doesn't work.
Heat cycling and felt gaskets just doesn't work.
'70 F-350 CS Cummins 6BT 10klb truck 64k mile Bahama Blue
Contact me for CNC Dome Lamp Bezels and Ash Tray pulls.
Contact me for CNC Dome Lamp Bezels and Ash Tray pulls.
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Re: Tons of Exhaust Manifold Leaks
This thread is a little grey in the tooth, as they say, but if anyone in the Brain Trust has any quick thoughts...I would be very appreciative. A couple of years ago I put a fresh head in my 71 300 I6. I did nothing to resurface the manifolds at that time when I put it back together because I wasn't smart enough. I reassembled the engine with a gasket on the manifolds, and all was well for a time, until leaks began to develop in the forward exhaust/head ports. I now have the manifolds off and at the machine shop. On the engine, as well as my observation of the failed gasket, the story is clear: the exhaust manifold is bowed, with the carburetor area being the high point of the manifold bow.
I have block-sanded the head on the mating surface area with 220/400 grit, and it cleaned up pretty well. No rust or scaling left, so I have a pretty good plane to start over here. Supposedly, in a day or so, I will have my machined head back in hand, and I am at a point of a decision here.
Would a wise person separate the intake/exhaust manifold assembly and fasten them individually, without a gasket? Would a wise person keep the manifolds assembled and use a gasket? With a sealant, or dry? I have a Felco combination intake/exhaust gasket to work with here, but if there is a better product or approach, I'm an eager student.
It is easy to look at the long inline manifolds, and then appreciate the stresses of heat over the long and narrow span. The assembly calls for loading the center bolts first, which should flatten the manifolds most effectively. In this case, does it make sense to torque above specs on those center bolts to help keep the center region of the manifolds flat against the head? Or just set the center bolts up to full torque before torquing the outer bolts?
Should there be a sealer of any kind in this reassembly? Intake ports only?
Thanks to any and all for your input and experience here. Gleno
I have block-sanded the head on the mating surface area with 220/400 grit, and it cleaned up pretty well. No rust or scaling left, so I have a pretty good plane to start over here. Supposedly, in a day or so, I will have my machined head back in hand, and I am at a point of a decision here.
Would a wise person separate the intake/exhaust manifold assembly and fasten them individually, without a gasket? Would a wise person keep the manifolds assembled and use a gasket? With a sealant, or dry? I have a Felco combination intake/exhaust gasket to work with here, but if there is a better product or approach, I'm an eager student.
It is easy to look at the long inline manifolds, and then appreciate the stresses of heat over the long and narrow span. The assembly calls for loading the center bolts first, which should flatten the manifolds most effectively. In this case, does it make sense to torque above specs on those center bolts to help keep the center region of the manifolds flat against the head? Or just set the center bolts up to full torque before torquing the outer bolts?
Should there be a sealer of any kind in this reassembly? Intake ports only?
Thanks to any and all for your input and experience here. Gleno
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Re: Tons of Exhaust Manifold Leaks
Remflex 3005 gasket is what you need - $40 on Amazon - after using them on the 360 in my bump I'm sold on them and will be using one on my 300 I6 build. I had my manifolds machined and cleaned up the heads and developed a leak again after 1 year of using FelPro gaskets and switched to Remflex and hadn't had any issues since. Use that and torque everything per factory specs and instructions and it should solve your problems........
"Life is a garden - dig it"...........
1968 F100 2wd - Rangoon Red - 360 w/T18 - power steering and brakes
1997 Honda CBR 900RR
1968 F100 2wd - Rangoon Red - 360 w/T18 - power steering and brakes
1997 Honda CBR 900RR
- farmallmta
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Re: Tons of Exhaust Manifold Leaks
Best answer to any question and posted on the internet anywhere on this date! This gentleman knows his FE exhaust leaks!BobbyFord wrote:If you ever have the heads off of the motor, have the exhaust side of the head milled, the exhaust manifolds milled flat and assemble with no gasket. If you use grade 8 bolts and grade 5 washers, it'll last forever.
The shop manual calls for assembling with a coat of white graphite grease on the mating surfaces. This is a cook-in material that fills the iron pores and the baked carbon is all the extra seal needed IF the surfaces are flat-milled/planed properly. Chevy manifolds can be surfaced, FE manifolds must be planed. Yes, there's a difference and Bowtie freaks just can't grasp it , nor will they plane your Ford manifolds properly because... you know, CHEBBY!!!! *drool*