flman wrote:
I guess considering some of the bolts were loose, you could have had a warped head? I am kind of surprised it worked if it was the head?
The ARP studs are capable of crushing the head to the yield point and conforming the head to the block. VW D16-D24 diesels have similar heads, and the cure for a warped head is ARP studs; this is especially nice because unlike the CRD the cam bearings are in the head, and when the head warps you cannot simply machine it down, unless you also line-bore the cam bearings, which is a PITA. WIth studs, you simply clamp the head to the block and crush it back into shape. (Steel gasket is highly recommended for this.)
The steel ARP specified is 220,000 psi yield strength, as opposed to the 154,000 psi (IIRC) yield of the specified 'TTY' bolt. But the real issue is the low strength of the aluminum head; the warping is caused in part because the factory bolts do not have high strength washers under them, and the aluminum yields locally before the factory bolts do because there is not enough bearing area under the 'TTY' bolt head. The aluminum crushes and deforms. You can see it in the photographs. The ARP studs not only provide more strength in the fastener, they provide more bearing area for the aluminum head to push on. This is better all around.
When the head overheats locally, my thinking is that in the factory situation that the aluminum crushes before the bolt stretches. Adding a thick hardened washer would help, but then the bolt might not have enough engagement in the block. I suppose that you could source a bolt that was a little longer, but how long would it take? ARP studs are a mature technology that is race proven, and lots of other diesel heads have used them in VWs and Volvos. I could spend time trying to find a slightly cheaper solution, but why?
Once you buy a set of studs, they never need replacing. This is especially germane when you consider this is a wet sleeve commercial style engine. In 300,000 more miles, when I need to rebuild the motor, I won't have to screw around with head bolts. I expect to drive these CRDs for the rest of my life, and with the studs I do not think I will ever have to worry about head warping.