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2.3L Cylinder Head Design from 5G Ranger

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Does any one have any pictures or information on the 2.3L Cylinder Head Design.

I wanted to see the Valve Train layout and Cylinder Head Design.

I looked for a while for pictures but cannot find any.
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Some info on the Cylinder Head Specs. I see the heads have Canted Valves.
Information from a 2015 Mustang. 2.3L

Top End
  • Larger camshafts : higher lift and longer duration.
  • High-flow 3 port integrated cylinder head, designed for Twinscroll Turbocharging.
  • 32.5mm intake valves.
  • 30mm Oversized sodium-filled exhaust valves, (compared to 28mm on the 2.0L).
  • Upgraded valve seat materials.
  • New Intake Manifold with increased plenum volume and larger diameter Throttle Body.
  • Upgraded GDI Fuel Pump and Injectors.
  • Twinscroll IWG turbocharger.

Mustang-EcoBoost-Head-1.webp
 
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Still cannot find a really good cut away. Does the head use a shim under bucket design . Does the 2.3L motor need valve adjustments. If so what are the intervals or is there some sort of Hydraulic system used.
 
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Still cannot find a really good cut away. Does the head use a shim under bucket design . Does the 2.3L motor need valve adjustments. If so what are the intervals or is there some sort of Hydraulic system used.
It uses a tappet/"bucket" design. Ford doesn't list a service interval for valve adjustment. Under normal use most newer engines won't need adjusted.

6500 tappet.PNG
 


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I see you can buy these buckets in different thickness. RockAuto has about 5 types.
Factory sets the cam to valve gap. On an old generation motor 2 Valve the gap is set at .050". Curios what the gap is on the 4 Valve motor. Yes no valve adjustment need unless there is premature wear.

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I see you can buy these buckets in different thickness. RockAuto has about 5 types.
Factory sets the cam to valve gap. On an old generation motor 2 Valve the gap is set at .050". Curios what the gap is on the 4 Valve motor. Yes no valve adjustment need unless there is premature wear.

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Unfortunately there is no set value as to what shim buckets are used. Why you ask? Well in the process of manufacturing the parts can be different enough where each one will be off by a few from each other
 

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There's going to be a set tolerance to what the gap will be set at. This is why you have different sizes of buckets. When building the motor you will have variances in the gap. This will be made up by the various bucket thickness. The buckets are ground to a certain thickness. I am presuming the gap is around .010 to .015" since it does not use a Hydraulic tappet.
It could be higher depending on how the engineering went. When I was still working ar nissan dealerships nissan had a very similar deal on thier engines. If I remember correctly I saw a shim bucket with a 0.060 thickness. It all depends on how the engineering goes.

Also I should add that by the time the shim buckets need to be replaced chances are the engine will need a complete overhaul or replacement.
 
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There's going to be a set tolerance to what the gap will be set at. This is why you have different sizes of buckets. When building the motor you will have variances in the gap. This will be made up by the various bucket thickness. The buckets are ground to a certain thickness. I am presuming the gap is around .010 to .015" since it does not use a Hydraulic tappet.

I would hope they just don't slap the head together and say we are happy with that. Not likely.
 

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There's going to be a set tolerance to what the gap will be set at. This is why you have different sizes of buckets. When building the motor you will have variances in the gap. This will be made up by the various bucket thickness. The buckets are ground to a certain thickness. I am presuming the gap is around .010 to .015" since it does not use a Hydraulic tappet.

I would hope they just don't slap the head together and say we are happy with that. Not likely.
In that aspect you are correct. Why does it concern you as to what they set measurement it I have no idea I less you are planning to change cams or something?
 

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I am a Machinist. Curious about how mechanical things are Engineered and applied.
My interest comes from the knowledge of Shim under Bucket design from Motorcycles.
Just trying to understand how valve train tolerances are applied to the 2.3L
I’m guessing when they build the motors they get to the point of assembly where they use measuring devices (probably laser by now) and turning crankshaft can measure each individually and then drop on the proper thickness for each measured. In automation this happens fast and in many ways more accurate then human checks. Or something close to it.
 

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I’m guessing when they build the motors they get to the point of assembly where they use measuring devices (probably laser by now) and turning crankshaft can measure each individually and then drop on the proper thickness for each measured. In automation this happens fast and in many ways more accurate then human checks. Or something close to it.
I cant remember the exact thing right off but from what I remember most manufacturers ow will stamp into the blocks and sometimes the head for factory size pistons and other parts like main bearings. Why? In hope that when the engine gets a rebuild it isnt too far but it is still recommended to verify the measurements.
 
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Opps. Deleting and adding to my thoughts.

I am a Machinist. Curious about how mechanical things are Engineered and applied.
My interest comes from the knowledge of Shim under Bucket design from Motorcycles.
Just trying to understand how valve train tolerances are applied to the 2.3L.

Yeah they are not hand built motors. Now you have me going on how its measured and applied.
Lasers. Some how its measured then the correct size cap would go on that valve to get the valve clearance to the specifications.

I like understanding how processes are done.
 
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Holy Shit. Not a clue. This video made me laugh. Just Bull Shit as he say's in his drawl. Assembling a head in under 4 minutes. Heavy handed. What was the point of sending it to a Machine Shop. This has to be fake

Mazda CX7 2.3 turbo head assembly - Bing video
 

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Holy Shit. Not a clue. This video made me laugh. Just Bull Shit as he say's in his drawl. Assembling a head in under 4 minutes. Heavy handed. What was the point of sending it to a Machine Shop. This has to be fake

Mazda CX7 2.3 turbo head assembly - Bing video
There is no way that is real! Assembly with an impact gun, no lube, no bearings, no clearance checks... These two gentlemen do a fine job!
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