The engine is a 6.0 l Chevy LS V8. Technically it is an LQ4 engine which is an iron block from a work truck or van. The pistons have a dish to them and no valve reliefs cut into them. This is one of the lower compression LS engines at 9.4 to 1. That will work fine for boost. This thing will see a lot of it.
This particular engine came from a friend of mine who bought it from a running vehicle off of craigslist. My buddy then promptly brought it home, took it apart with an impact gun and threw all the parts in a tub. Well three tubs to be exact.
The insides of this engine were in remarkable shape for something with 160,000 mi on it. It is obviously been neglected as, I believe, both the valve cover gaskets were toast and puking oil all over the sides of the engine. Literally the entire engine was coated in a quarter inch thick film of dirt and grease and oil. It was thoroughly waterproof. That's 6 mm for my metric friends.
How the heads looked when I started
2022-12-25_06-01-52 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
I had dropped the block off at the machine shop to have it hot tanked, the head surface is decked for flatness, hone the cylinders and install new cam bearings. They advise me they were not able to hot tank the heads because they were aluminum and the chemicals would dissolve it.
That means I had to clean it myself. I discovered this miracle liquid called chem dip. It was like $40 a gallon which I did not like but after seeing how well it worked it was worth it. I bought four gallons is that's all I could find locally and dump them into a 5 gallon bucket. I was able to soak half the head at a time.
Essentially it's soak it for a couple hours, scrub the daylights out of it and resoak it. This stuff is technically for cleaning carburetors but it destroys all oils and gunk.
In process-
2022-12-25_06-02-06 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
2022-12-25_06-02-19 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
2022-12-25_06-02-33 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
2022-12-25_06-03-08 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
My conscience got the better of me and I ended up taking the heads back to the shop to have those services cut as well. I figured for the things I have planned for this engine. I might as well start off with the most chances of having it survived. That means flathead gasket surfaces.
Time to paint that block. I've been really taken with a lot of the newer colors I'm seeing from most car manufacturers these days. They're glossy but not metallic. I like to refer to them as solid colors if that makes any sense. The color I chose for this engine is from Toyota and is called lunar rock.
I hung the block at the shop and got busy with the needle scaler busting off all the stuff that the hot tank didn't just get off by itself.
Then it was a thorough cleaning with brake cleaner and primer, base coat, clear coat after that. I do not claim to be a painter but this stuff came out pretty good. The local paint shop was able to load up an aerosol can of the base so all I had to do was point and shoot basically.
The color is difficult to realize by looking at a picture. And even in person, the color does look different in sunlight versus under fluorescent lights.
2022-12-25_06-03-33 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
2022-12-25_06-03-59 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
And because I'm a sucker for free shipping, I ended up picking this up from summit racing while ordering a bunch of other crap.
2022-12-25_06-04-19 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
Got the crankshaft set into place. Chevy was not screwing around when they designed this engine. Six bolt main caps. Four vertically into the block and one from each side horizontally into the main cap from the outside of the block. The more I worked with this, the more I could see why people are getting four figure horsepower numbers from these engines and they hold together.
2022-12-25_06-05-02 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
I got all the rings gapped. This is the key to a stock bottom and holding together with a crap load of boost pressure. I opened up the ring gap on these to.030" minimum. I have a couple that are approaching 40 but I don't care. It's not like it won't run. 040 would be right around 1 mm for my metric friends. 030 is about .75mm
2022-12-25_06-05-12 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
I had to get the Truck Norris cam. This is not the rowdiest cam on the market for the LS but it has proven to add a significant amount of power and torque to an NA engine. Seems like 400 to 450 horsepower is easily attainable with this cam and this engine. Adding 15 lb of boost pressure will roughly double that power number. And I'm not afraid to go to 25 providing we can keep it fueled.
2022-12-25_06-05-23 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
New GM oil pump and melling timing chain. Gears are OEM.
2022-12-25_06-05-35 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
More stuff painted with Toyota lunar rock
2022-12-25_06-05-57 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
Big windage tray from the factory. What's not to love?
2022-12-25_06-06-10 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
New rear cover and rear main seal
2022-12-25_06-06-24 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
Oil pan!
2022-12-25_06-06-33 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
ARP head studs. I have purchased running vehicles for less money than I spent on this box of head studs. However, I recognize that they are also a key and holding an extreme amount of cylinder pressure in place. I like my head gaskets to stay where they're supposed to be.
2022-12-25_06-06-40 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
Here's a neat little widget I discovered to allow me to feed oil to two turbochargers. Here's a great case of something I could easily make myself but this thing cost like $23 and there's no way I could even draw it up and solid works and think about programming it for that amount of money.
2022-12-25_06-06-49 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
Here are the ARP studs ready to go. A lot of people wonder why these things cost so much, but I can see why. Higher tensile steel, heat treated, threads have been rolled instead of cut and they come with 12 point nuts and special washers. The washers are smooth on one side and waffle cut on the other. The waffle cut grips, the head and the smooth side allows the nut to rotate easier. ARP instructions call for applying ARPs thread lube to the underside of the nut as well as the threads. On that end. The block threads get installed dry. Each stud, conveniently, has a female hex in the end to allow you to drive the stud into place.
That's a huge convenience because that thread lube gets everywhere. I think it's grown in the same factory anti-seize is made in.
2022-12-25_06-08-05 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
Here's a little poem I wrote on my piston crowns. I don't know if this Flickr video is going to show up or not but I'll give it a try.
PXL_20221115_222224176 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
Getting ready to install these heads and decided to take an artsy shot of the valve springs. I reused all the intake valves. As I lapped them all, I discovered that all the exhaust valves were pitted all over the band that contacted the cylinder head. I'm estimating roughly 50% of the contact was lost. I don't know why they pitted, I haven't seen that before. But, as the only way the exhaust valves can be cooled is by transferring heat to the seat in the head. I want as much contact as I can get. I spent $100 on all new exhaust valves. They all lapped in fine.
2022-12-25_06-08-15 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
I had to pull the oil pan back off since I forgot about drains for the turbos. So I yank the pan and got a really nice carbide tooth hole saw at harbor freight and drilled holes in a perfectly good oil pan.
2022-12-25_06-08-55 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
- 10 AN bulkhead fittings were installed to facilitate oil drainage. A rubber sealed crush washer is on the inside along with some RTV. Threadlocker, on the retaining nut on the inside of the pan. I'm pretty happy with how this came out.
2022-12-25_06-09-12 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
Here's the whole thing put together
2022-12-25_06-09-34 by
Kevin Ames, on Flickr
Sidebar in the next post-