Engine Top End

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© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only


• Cylinder head construction
• Valve train construction
• Intake manifold construction
• Exhaust manifold construction

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only
Engine Top End

Includes the cylinder head, valve train, valve cover, and intake
and exhaust manifolds
© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only
• A cylinder head is located over the cylinder
block.
• The cylinder head must be able to withstand
extremely the high temperature and
preusser that occur during engine
operation .
• Cylinder head is made of cast iron
• Some recent engine have cylinder heads
that are made of aluminum alloy, as this has
a greater cooling capacity than cast iron.
© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only
Cylinder Head
and Parts

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Cylinder Head Construction

This cast aluminum head has four-valve


combustion chambers
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Valve Guide Construction

• There are two basic types of valve


guides:
– integral valve guides
– pressed-in valve guides

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Integral Valve Guide
• Part of the cylinder head casting
• Simply a hole machined through the
cylinder head
• Very common because of its low
production cost

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only
Pressed-In Valve Guide
• Separate sleeve forced into a hole
machined in the cylinder head
• Made of cast iron or bronze
• During repair, a worn guide can be
pressed out and a new guide can be
quickly pressed in

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only
Valve Seat Construction
• Valve seats can be integral or pressed-in
• Integral valve seat
– machined portion of the cylinder head
casting
• Pressed-in valve seat
– separate part that is forced into a recess
cut into the head
– commonly used in aluminum heads
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Valve Seats and Guides

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Valve Seat Angle

• Angle formed by the face of the seat


• Most engines use a 45º angle
• Some high-performance engines use
seat angles of 30º

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only
• The valve train controls the opening
and closing of the cylinder head ports
• Construction will vary with engine
design
• To be able to work on any type of
valve train, you must understand these
differences

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only
Valve Construction
• Automotive engines commonly use
poppet valves
• Some valve stems are chrome plated to
better resist wear
• Grooves are cut into the valve stem tops
for the keepers

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only
Valve Face Angle
• Angle formed between the valve face and
valve head
• Normal valve face angles are 45º and 30º

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Valve Seal Construction

• Valve seals come in two basic types:


– umbrella valve seals
– O-ring valve seals

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Umbrella Valve Seal
• Shaped like a cup
• Made of rubber or plastic
• Slides down over the valve stem before
the spring and retainer
• Covers the small clearance between the
valve stem and guide
• Keeps oil from being drawn into the
cylinder head port and combustion
chamber
© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only
Umbrella Valve Seal

A. Synthetic rubber seal with plastic shedder


insert
B. All synthetic rubber seal
C. Plastic valve seal
© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only
O-Ring Valve Seal
• Small round seal that fits into an extra
groove cut in the valve stem
• Seals the gap between the retainer and
valve stem
• Stops oil from flowing though the retainer,
down the stem, and into the guide
• Fits onto the valve stem after the spring
and retainer

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only
O-Ring Valve Seal

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Valve Spring Construction

This dual coil spring is designed to


increase spring pressure
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Valve Spring Terminology
• Spring tension
– stiffness of a valve spring
– service manual will give the tension in
pounds or kilograms for specific
compressed lengths
• Spring free length
– length of the spring when removed
from the engine
© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only
Valve Spring Shim
• Very thin, accurately machined washer
used to increase spring tension
• When a shim is placed under a spring,
the open and closed lengths of the
spring are reduced
• Provides a means of restoring full
spring pressure without spring
replacement

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only
Valve Retainers and Keepers

Used to lock the


valve spring
onto the valve

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Valve Spring Seat
• Cup-shaped washer installed between
the cylinder head and the bottom of the
valve spring
• Provides a pocket to hold the bottom of
the valve spring

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only
Camshaft
• Controls when the valves open and
close
• May be driven by gears, a chain, or a
belt
• There may be one or two camshafts per
cylinder head

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Camshaft

In dual overhead
cam engines, there
are two camshafts
per cylinder head

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Camshaft

Located in the engine block or in the


cylinder head
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Camshaft Terminology
• Camshaft lift
– how far the valve opens
• Camshaft duration
– how long the valve stays open
• Valve timing
– valve opening and closing in relation to the
position of the pistons

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only
Push Rods
• Metal tubes or rods with specially
formed ends
• Used in cam-in-block engines to
transfer motion from the lifters to the
rocker arms

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Push Rods

An inline engine
using a pivot ball to
hold the rocker arm

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Rocker Arms

Transfer valve train motion to the


valve stem tips
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Adjustable Rocker Arms
• Used to change the valve train
clearance
• Either a screw is provided on the
rocker arm or the rocker arm pivot
point can be changed
• Must be used with mechanical lifters

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Valve clearance adjustment

Valve clearance measurement

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Nonadjustable Rocker Arms

• Have no means of changing valve


clearance
• Used only with some hydraulic lifters
• The rocker arm assembly is tightened to
a specified torque

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Intake Manifold construction
• Holds the throttle body and has
passages, called runners, going to each
cylinder head port
• Made of Cast iron, aluminum, or
plastic
• Intake manifold often induced fresh air
, it does not exposed to high
temperature
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Manifold Runners
• Carry either the air-fuel mixture or air
to the cylinder head ports

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Exhaust Manifold
• Removes burned exhaust gases from
the cylinder head exhaust port to the
exhaust pipe
• Made of cast iron or steel having good
wear resistances.

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only

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