Cheap headstuds on ebay...
I like to equate this to stuff like Vibrant silicone couplers. You end up paying $60 for a single coupler when you can go on ebay and get a box of the same **** for $60, with lots of aluminum tubing to do the rest of the job.
I always just felt like ARP made a nice product, the main studs I have feel like a high quality product. They aren't, however, worth 3-4x the price of a similar product. If the off brand can get the job done, then whats the difference besides the money spent? Bragging rights? ARP is really the only name in the game, it would be nice if they had some competition to bring the prices down.
That's why studs go in the block finger-tight. When you torque the nut, the body of the stud stretches and that stretch effectively clamps the head down. This way, torquing has nothing to do with the threads (in the block), they are out of the picture...
The Best V8 Stories One Small Block at Time
That's why studs go in the block finger-tight. When you torque the nut, the body of the stud stretches and that stretch effectively clamps the head down. This way, torquing has nothing to do with the threads (in the block), they are out of the picture...
the load is still all on the threads but now its a Tension load when torquing and not a Tension and torsional load. The axis/torsional load is what stresses to the bolt/threads cause the threads to be the weak point
The studs should bottom out in the holes to gain the max amount of contact with the alum/iron threads. Any point of the studs should be able to take at a min of 75lbs with out damage. a stud should be as strong as a bolt.
I have put over 120 lbs of force on ARP studs to get them out of a iron block use in salt water we added double nuts on the top and twisted it out of the block at a little over 120 lbs the threads in the block came out with the stud.
I was attempting to communicate this to you before you promptly hung up on me the first, second and third time. Getting this communicated to you and your wife, was impossible, but now you can rest assured that the stud was torqued at 5lbs or 60 inlbs and the stud snapped at 65ft lbs of nut tightening according to my Matco torque wrenches.
Unfortunately I purchased these off of EBAY, and did not immediatly use them. The bad thing about that for me is the fact that I as a buyer have very little recourse in the transaction after 30 or so days. When I did use them, and one of them snapped in the block, getting the broken threads out of the block was an ordeal, that I did not want to go through again, when any of the 30 fasteners could break at any time.
With such a high feedback on the sight, I thought that getting the parts refunded from you, and purchasing the ARP studs (Possibly from you) would be no problem. I was terribly mistaken with that train of thought. Your email stated and I quote "good job genius they are supposed to be torqued at 144 in lbs" . I guess some may consider that good customer service, but not for me.
I guess back to the facts, the stud kit came with no instruction,. stated same tensile strength as the ARP studs, so I used the instructions from the ARP website (assuming the fasteners should be similar) Te studs were lubricated with 30wt oil, and torqued to 60 in lbs and then nuts were in three sequence 22 44 65 snap. I would not recommend these fasteners for the above reasons, from any seller, especially one that jumps to quick and horribly innacurate conclusions.
What's the exact way you guys install them? Just like the ARP studs? I hear you should soak everything in oil first for a few days...what's the reasoning behind that?
http://www.youtube.com/embed/hSKlEDPmmtY
http://www.youtube.com/embed/W-rDEOKq0qo
http://www.youtube.com/embed/hGK0mi9yjGM
http://www.youtube.com/embed/hSKlEDPmmtY
http://www.youtube.com/embed/W-rDEOKq0qo
http://www.youtube.com/embed/hGK0mi9yjGM







