geordi wrote:
In the case of overheating the engine, consider the overall surface areas involved - The head is limited to the 4" circle of the actual cylinder, and much less so of the rest of the flat surface area. The block, meanwhile, has the entire inner surface of the piston sleeves to transfer heat, and presumably some water contact on the back of the sleeves to move that heat away to the block iron.
The heat in the iron will translate most effectively into the bolts which are in direct contact and closely adjacent to the cylinder heat, where the head has some insulation potential from the head gasket's layers to protect it. The bolts would expand and or potentially change their metallurgical properties - this is why I believe the bolts weaken over time. Continual heat cycling eventually weakens the steel enough that they stretch out or actually rotate in place.
I have worked on many of these now - None (thankfully) with a cracked head or block, but MANY with loose bolts in a variety of positions. Read through the research thread and see the results people have posted for yourself - The numbers aren't as important as the differences within in the same engine. They should all be roughly the same numbers, not all over the map with 40+ pounds of a range!
I carried out a test on an old head using a set of factory bolts, the head is far weaker than the bolts, I think the chance of them rotating and becoming loose is almost impossible in a non rotating environment. Washers under the bolts with enlarged recesses may help to some degree.