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Old 05-19-2017, 06:50 AM
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Default not my valve stem's keeper

Front left cylinder exhaust valve has dropped past the valve keepers & spring retainer. No compression in this cylinder. The valve keepers remain in place; see attached photo: the keepers are there, but the valve has dropped. How does this happen? My mechanic is puzzled. Any thoughts or suggestions are appreciated. The tear-down continues.

Roush 402R, 8,500 miles, Tremec TKO-500, Superformance MK III roadster SPO 2650.
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Old 05-19-2017, 07:44 AM
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Valve bounce is probably the cause.
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Old 05-19-2017, 05:22 PM
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I've had that before with one engine that I rescued.

I would wind the engine over to place the cylinder at TDC, then remove the rockers, remove the spring and retainer etc.

If all the valve stem tips are still the same height, and the valve stem is ok, then leakdown test the cylinder, if it is good then continue with rest of repair.

More than likely, the head will need to come off.

If one valve has done this, what about the other 15?

There are many clearances to check in OHV valvetrain.

Last edited by Gaz64; 05-19-2017 at 05:33 PM..
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Old 05-20-2017, 03:50 AM
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CHANMADD, thanks for the word. I've never heard of valve bounce before, but from what I've read on the topic, it seems I was revving the engine faster than the springs were designed for.

Gaz64, you're right, the head is definitely coming off, to see if the piston head was damaged by the bouncey valve. The pushrod for this valve is slightly lower than the others, which makes me wonder if it is bent. I will post more photos as the teardown continues.
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Old 05-20-2017, 05:58 AM
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I've heard it referred to as valve float. Happens when the cam lobe is trying to open the valve again before it has a chance to fully close.
Late 50's Studebaker Golden Hawk (very fast car) was reputed to suffer from it over 6000 RPM.
DonC
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Old 05-20-2017, 06:47 AM
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care must be taken when using aftermarket rockers, the roller should be centered on the valve tip, and the relief between the rocker and the retainer should be looked at.
if the rocker comes into contact with the retainer during a valve event, the result will be
exactly what you have
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Old 05-20-2017, 07:59 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by CHP2RA View Post
Front left cylinder exhaust valve has dropped past the valve keepers & spring retainer. No compression in this cylinder. The valve keepers remain in place; see attached photo: the keepers are there, but the valve has dropped. How does this happen? My mechanic is puzzled. Any thoughts or suggestions are appreciated. The tear-down continues.

Roush 402R, 8,500 miles, Tremec TKO-500, Superformance MK III roadster SPO 2650.

Certainly the head has to come off when it does you will quickly find the culprit.

If the keepers are still in place in the retainer there are two obvious possibilities;


Possibility 1

The keepers were not hardened steel and the spring rate was high enough to shear the retaining land(s) off the keeper allowing the valve to slip through. This usually results in PTV contact and a bent valve along with a valve seat that needs to be repaired.

If this is what has happened to you you need to replace all the remaining locks before you experience a repeat failure on a different valve. While this is a possible explanation of your failure, Possibilities 2 & 3 are more likely.


Possibility 2

That valve was experiencing valve float. The reasons for valve float range from operating the engine at a speed the spring could no longer control the valve at, to a spring that was installed incorrectly. Incorrect spring installation would include too low a seat pressure, too many shims that caused the spring to stack solid during operation and the rocker to force the valve through soft steel locks or the aluminum retainer (more on that in a bit).

Because your engine is a Roush and I suspect no one has rebuilt it from the as delivered Roush condition my suspicion would be mild steel multi groove keepers, possibly a low seating pressure for the spring, more (but not normally excessive) rpm than the low seat pressure spring could properly control valve motion at, and repeated operation in this rpm range.

The result of that sort of problem would be the eventual failure of the valve lock and the valve pushing through the locks allowing the spring to relax as you have experienced.


Possibility 3

If the keepers and the valve are both undamaged then there is a third possibility. The third possibility is the valve locks and the valve performed properly but the retainer failed allowing the the locks and valve to push through.

This sort of failure is usually caused by a spring that had insufficient seat pressure and or spring rate. During operation the spring can not control the valve motion and the opening ramp on the cam causes the rocker to slap or if you will hammer the stem of the valve because the valve is not where it is supposed to be.

The repeated hammering by the rocker drives the valve stem / valve lock combination through the aluminum retainer like a nail through a 2x4.


Bottom Line

You have some Sherlock Homes detective work laid out in front of you. Take your time be observant and you will find it is one of those three possibilities that has laid waste to that valve/valve spring assembly. Correct the problem and you should be good to go.

In the FWIW category aluminum retainers on the street look cool (when the valve covers are off) but add nothing to the reliability of the valve train. Even when you do not have the sort of carnage you are experiencing the steel spring is always abrading away against the underside of the retainer.

There are many sources of good quality steel racing retainers today. It would be to your advantage to invest in some. You will be surprised to discover they weigh about the same as aluminum because they can use thinner cross sections and achieve the same strength with steel.

If you do periodic Blackstone Labs oil analyses you will find the aluminum from the steel springs abrading against the aluminum retainers prominently reading in their analysis. Eventually the abrasion will bring an unhappy event — that doesn't need to happen.


Ed

p.s. I don't know what type of valves Roush specs in their engines. Regardless of whether they are single groove valve stems or multi groove valve stems your locks need to be hardened steel. The multi groove valve stems were designed to allow the valve to rotate in service providing better service life.

The single groove valve stems were designed for racing to prevent the type of failure you have just experienced. They will grab the valve stem incredibly tightly preventing the valve from rotating. They also will prevent the valve from escaping the locks. They do all of this at the price of not rotating the valve in service.

For a race engine the single lock solution is the cat's meow. For a non race application the multi groove valve stem with hardened steel multi groove locks is the answer. Irregardless of valve stem lock style you want to be using hardened steel locks — and I would encourage you to explore steel racing retainers.
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Old 05-21-2017, 08:28 AM
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Here's a good watch....
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=WtqDHJDN79w
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Old 05-21-2017, 10:28 AM
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Thanks for posting that Chanmadd. I was looking for a similar YouTube vid to show just those dynamics. In the vid there are a number of dynamics at work. The two that are fairly significant are the sing's disposition to rotate in service (hence the street use value of the multi-groove locks) and also the secondary harmonic in the spring. It is the secondary harmonics that cause the wave you see in the video to propagate up and down the spring.

No matter what we do it is almost impossible to escape that moving wave. It is virtually identical to what we can reproduce using a slinky and our hands. Where the moving wave can cause us heartburn is when the frequency, the spring length and the wave velocity allow a reflected second wave to originate traveling in opposite directions to the first.

When they are exactly out of phase they are cancelling in their effect. As they start to come into phase they can literally break the spring when the phase of the two oscillations coincide and the amplitudes are additive. Assuming adequate energy in the two waves, the wave spring will break.

I want to say it was PAC springs that illustrated this on a Spintron but I can't find the YouTube vid anymore — although they have several very good other vids on YouTube.


Ed
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Old 05-21-2017, 05:11 PM
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Whatever has happened here, more than likely the keeper grooves have been sheared off, ALL the springs need to come off to replace ALL the keepers.

At least one head may need to come off.

It is the grip of the keepers that holds the valve, and the taper match of the keeper to retainer.

You should be able to assemble a bare valve, retainer and a pair of keepers to stay locked in your hands.

If they can't, then something like this will happen.

If the rocker has kissed the retainer at anytime during valve operation, then the sudden non-centred load will shock the keepers loose.

Gary
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Old 05-22-2017, 12:02 AM
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I am on the same advice channel as Gary, CHP2RA. Add to his advice that you ensure they are made from hardened steel. I would also encourage you to get race spring retainers made from steel.

Ed
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Old 06-05-2017, 01:14 PM
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Gary, Ed, Don, Chanmad & FWB,

You were correct as to what caused my #5 exhaust valve to drop. The underside of the rocker arms (other than the rollers) on all valves were contacting the valve spring retainers. The underside of the rocker arm on the front left #5 cylinder exhaust valve was also contacting the valve stem head all around the roller, but perhaps that was after the valve dropped. The off-center contact likely caused the keepers to move in & out of the retainers, wearing the lands, causing them to release the valve stem.
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Old 06-05-2017, 01:16 PM
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#5 exhaust exhaust valve in head.
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Old 06-05-2017, 01:19 PM
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#5 exhaust exhaust valve removed
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Old 06-05-2017, 01:28 PM
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#5 exhaust valve rocker underside
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Old 06-05-2017, 01:32 PM
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other left bank rocker undersides
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Old 06-05-2017, 01:37 PM
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#5 exhaust exhaust valve retainer & springs - note wear all around the high point of the retainer, matching the wear on the underside of the rocker.
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Old 06-05-2017, 01:39 PM
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#5 exhaust exhaust valve keepers, showing erosion of lands.
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Old 06-05-2017, 01:44 PM
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#5 exhaust valve guide, side view, showing cracks.
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Old 06-05-2017, 01:45 PM
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#5 exhaust valve guide, top view, showing cracks
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