HOW AND WHERE TO START CUTTING AND
PORTING
BASIC
CUTTING
Clean
cylinder head or work to be done thoroughly first.
Lacquer thinner is good for this; also hot soapy water (dry when
through). Spray cylinder walls with Machinist Dykem Blue or you
can use layout dye and mark cylinder to the specs you want.
A scriber is
pretty handy to have for the mark up parts. Know where and how
much you want to cut before you start. Carbide cutters / burrs are
the best for rough cutting. Choose one that fits the contour or
surface you are working on. Use short shank carbides all you can. The
shorter the cutter, the more control you have. Use long shank
carbides only when you can reach no other way. It is a little more
trouble to change cutters, but much easier on you and the tools and
it is much safer. Always keep burrs in ports, cavity, or
confined area when rotating. Port
flow is just as important as how much metal you remove, SO
CONCENTRATE ON MAKING STEADY, PRECISE CUTS, HOLDING SURFACES OR PORTS
AS FLAT AS POSSIBLE. Leave yourself 20 thousandths for clean-up and
any polish work, as you will need this much to achieve the final
dimensions. Remember you can take more cuts, but you can't put it
back. In each stage make the surface look the same before going to
the next step, regardless of the stage you are in - cutting, leveling
or polishing. If it all looks the same, you don't have to go back to
the former step. Example - it is hard to remove cutter marks after
getting to the first polishing stage.
THIS
IS ONE OF THE BASIC STARTING POINTS FOR CYLINDER HEAD PORTING. HAVE A
PLAN.