Take it to an engine shop, a quick hone may be all it needs, or a bronze liner. Replacing a guide requires heat, a press, honing the guide to size and recutting the valve seat for the correct alignment.
I just found that one valve guide on my 1997 vintage NOS heads has a rough spot and has left some scoring on the valve stem. (The engine seems to have been run for a short time at the factory.)
Is it really just a matter of hammering or pressing out the old guide and the same for putting in the new one?
At any given point in time, somewhere in the world someone is working on a Land-Rover.
Take it to an engine shop, a quick hone may be all it needs, or a bronze liner. Replacing a guide requires heat, a press, honing the guide to size and recutting the valve seat for the correct alignment.
Thanks, I suspected as much after reading: Rover Valve Guide Options (British V8 Newsletter V12/I1, January 2004 where he points out that the factory put the guides in unfinished and then finished them at the same time as the seat. I like the quaint way the workshop manual tells you to just bash them out and bash them in and then recut the seat.
There's a great bit of DIY here: Chris Cowdery Global Presence
I'm extremely hesitant to send it away as Perth is full of morons. Not only is getting a job done properly hard enough, but getting whatever part packed up so it isn't damaged on the way home is apparently impossible too!
I may as well sell these and get some from Turners. Anyone near an engine shop would have an easy time fixing this.
Here's the picture I didn't have the chance to take yesterday:
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At any given point in time, somewhere in the world someone is working on a Land-Rover.
Personally I would just clean the inside of the guide myself. Cut a slot in a piece of 5-6mm rod, insert a small scrap of fine wet-n-dry paper folded double (grit exposed both sides), and spin gently in the guide. This is a variation of a home made brake cylinder hone I was shown as a lad.
Thanks again for the advice. I might try that, though having checked the rest of the valve stems more carefully, there are a few more from that head that aren't too good. The other head is fine. I think a variety of apprentices built this thing.
At any given point in time, somewhere in the world someone is working on a Land-Rover.
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