Kawboy,
Thanks for the kind words. Let me say I have no experience racing 4-stroke MC engines. We do have some wild 2-strokes including a 145hp RZ350 (now 500cc). Currently we are running SBCs in our Sprint Cars, and Toyota's in our Road Race cars. Have been down the LS route and had bad luck. Switched the LS car to Toyota just because "I" needed a change. Actually the Toyota 4L V8s we have are just like a 90's era MC design.
You method for changing the seats is a good as any. I've never personally changed a seat, but yes that is one of the normal methods. I'm currently paying $695/engine for low mileage (50k) engines, so I have spare heads/blocks sitting.
On seats, I would select seats based on your valves. The various alloys that contain copper are generally meant for situations where you need to get the heat out of the valve. That would be if you have Titanium valves or you are running a Turbo. Short of that, I would run Powdered Metal. But, Powdered Metal can be just about any mix of metals so you do need to make sure you pick one that is appropriate.
Personally, I'd open the Kibblewhite catalog (
www.kpmi.us), and pick from that - or call them.
On the geometry issue...
Obviously if the valve is sunk in the head, folks just need to suck it up and replace the seats.
But, on the other hand, you should not run out of adjustment until the valve is sunk so far that performance is clearly impacted. There are generally a few options:
- Grind the valve tips. This is outlined in the KZ manual - I saw the drawing, so it must be acceptable for this engine. I am sure it specifies how much you can grind off. Typically this is a very small amount, like 0.3mm. Reason is that only the tip is hardened and the hardening is not very deep. Grind through it, or almost through it, and it will hammer it'self into oblivion real quick. I personally am very nervous about this approach.
- Grind the under side of the bucket. I don't think this will get you any appreciable amount on the KZ, I don't have one in front of me but I don't think there is much that can be ground off. On the toyotas, there is a nub about 2mm high that the valve contacts, so there is lots of possible "adjustment", but grinding inside the bucket is a PITA.
- Switch buckets. Switch to Sim Under Bucket. In this scenario you replace the retainer with one that will hold a shim. The shim sits in the retainer, on top of the valve stem. The bucket contacts the shim. The cam rides straight on the bucket. This means the cams have to come out to change the shims. But you will never spit a shim. If you are going to wild cams, this is somewhere between wise and required.
- Have shorter valves made. This one is obvious, just get 0.6mm shorter valves and problem is solved.
- Grind the cam base down. In reality, removing 0.5mm from the base circle probably has no ill effect (so long as the surface is still hard). But we are always trying to get stronger cams so this seems counter productive.
Exhaust valves are quite expensive now, and I expect intakes will be too, as soon as the Vesrah stock runs out. I looked specifically at exhaust valves, and the Z900/Z1000 valves are real close except the stem length. If my head had this issue and the seats were good, I would see what it would cost to have Kibble White make me a set of valves. Might even pay to have 20 sets made and just sell the rest. I am sure they can easily accommodate making standard and 0.6mm shorter vavles.
All posts should have pictures... So here is what one of my bad engine days looks like (yes the car in the background):