GoodnightWalter wrote:
drmini in aust wrote:
Morris 1100 wrote:
drmini in aust wrote:
Morris 1100 wrote:
Step 1: Fill the tank with unleaded.
Step 2: Drive it.
Yeah that'll work, for a while..
then:
Step 3: Rebuild the head with unleaded seats once the valves have sunk into the head, or burned out.
850 exhaust valves were not made from the greatest material.

It has worked for my Morris 1100 for the past 7 years. Drive it everyday too.
Aha yes but the head hasn't been rebuilt in the last 10 years, has it!!
I got valve seat recession in a 1098 head in 6 months from rebuild. All it took was
use no additive and let my 18 year old son drive it as usual.
Note I did this on purpose, to see with my own 2 peepers what happens.

The hot valves pulled bits of iron out of the head...
My 1360 gets Flashlube additive, it works for me. As it did for all those old iron-headed Holden taxis on LPG years ago.
That's because you didn't follow the instructions.

What instructions???
I set out to prove that, if you drive a Mini `normally' (ie rev it a bit and use the available performance) with a reconditioned stock iron head using unleaded fuel (it was 95, by the way) without additives, the `seats' in the head will wear. And, they did.
Morris 1100 trots his antique 1100 out to `prove' you don't need any additives, but it never gets a decent rev and the lead encrusted valves have never been out of it.
OK, we may as well continue on with myths and legends as we're now into it, so who is running the snakeoil canisters, eg Fuelstar that `put tin into the fuel'... and have you ever removed the head for a looksee after considerable miles?
More importantly, have any been weighed before and after?

_________________
DrMini- 1970 wasaMatic 1360, Mk1S crank, 86.6HP (ATW) =~125 @ crank, 45 Dellorto (38 chokes), RE282 sprint cam, 1.5 rockers, 11.0:1 C/R.
