are parts for IH heads still available - ie. Valve guides, seats, welded rocker arm shaft bushings? Any reason why a worn rocker shaft couldn't be welded and then turned on a lathe? Anybody check their own heads for cracks with dyes, electro magnet? Thanks in advance for any info.
We currently have in stock all parts needed to repair any rocker assembly using some new parts and some reconditioned parts. We add items to the inventory as we can locate supply sources.
Since new rocker shafts have recently become unavailable, we're working on a rebuilding process which we will have done ourselves, a recent experience using another vendor for this has been less than satisfactory. Welding of the rocker shaft is not feasible (that is not the way a reconditioning process would be done), and cost of having the entire shafts and all it's variations reproduced is prohibitive.
We are also looking at having rocker bushings for welded rockers produced as the only commercial manufacturer of those items for the rebuild industry ceased production more than a year ago. Again, the bushing is only one part of the welded rocker arm solution, we have many used rockers with perfect bushings, but the valve tip pad is worn significantly. Reconditioning that part is fairly simple, but is part of an entire part assembly, not just a bandaid.
There are many subtleties to this whole "rocker assembly" issue and it's not a simple solution, this is due to some parts still being available but not in sufficient quantity going forward. And add to the issue the fact there are two entirely different rocker systems used on these engines over time, along with several variations of each.
As for head reconditioning, any competent machine shop can do this regarding the ihc-produced I-4/sv head sets. Key word here...competent. Head work on these items is certainly not any different than dealing with any other similar item. No competent machine shop would ever accept an ihc-produced head from a customer for reconditioning without first performing crack detection using normal commercial processes.
For myself I keep on hand a small "spotcheck jr." dye penetrant crack detection system from magnaflux/versachem. But using a system such as that for complete block and head inspection is not feasible. I do use it to "grade" cylinder heads before they are taken to the machine shop, I don't want to waste effort and cash to have heads magnafluxed if the combustion chamber(s) May have issues. And many 345 heads do have cracks evident in the combustion chamber area.
The I-4 and sv blocks do have particular areas that need to be crack-checked, I also do that in those areas myself before sending the block out for cleaning, magnaflux, and machine work. However, the "normal" cracks that May be present are absolutely no problem regarding engine functionality, and I would would never "scrap" a block that has defects in those known areas as they have no bearing on engine longevity/performance.
I can assure you that no one in the IH community has done more work regarding the "valve train/rocker assembly" issue than our crew here at ihon, that is very evident from the volume of threads regarding this issue in the three years since this forum was initiated. And no other vendor has put the effort into placing engine rebuild components on the shelf than we have.
Typical "rocker shaft" thread, go here:
http://www.forums.IHPartsAmerica.com/gas-engine-tech/5399-need-some-tech-advice-camshafts.html
And here:
http://www.forums.IHPartsAmerica.com/gas-engine-tech/5199-broken-rocker.html
We deal with this subject every day around here in one format or another!