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I have a silly question.Do I need to slacken the exhaust header from the head when re-torquing?
No.
FYI - I recently retorqued the heads on my '03 V11 LeMans. I loosened all the nuts at the same time, then retorqued them all in stages (increasing torque until final number reached). However, I ended up with a small oil leak at the head (which was not there before).
the 29~32lb/ft (39~44Nm) fall right in the middle of the embarrassing overlapping high/low zone of my two torque wrenchesthe 3/8" drive range is 7.5lb/ft to 36.9lb/ft (10Nm to 50Nm)the 1/2" drive range is 29.5lb/ft to 147.5lb/ft (40Nm to 200Nm)Which one will you pick to do the job? (ignore the digital one)
" Also if you lubricate the threads with oil check the viscosity at the temperature of initial assembly and then adjust for current ambient temperature. " That is only necessary if you do not use the correct kind of oil. Castrol 70 weight requires you to torque slower but you don't need to check the viscosity.
I'd use the 1/2" drive and torque to 32 ft. lbs.
" Do I need to slacken the exhaust header from the head when re-torquing? "Yes, and be certain that the bike is within +/- 250 foot of sea level.
If the specs don't say anything about oiling the threads, the torque figure given is presumed to be for dry threads. Keep in mind that torque is a derivative measurement. The measurement you really need to ensure proper clamping force is the stretch of the bolt. That's why manufacturers like Carrillo give stretch numbers for their rod bolts.I once set up a connecting rod in a vise and measured the torque required to bring the rod bolt to the stretch number with the threads dry, lubed with oil, and lubed with moly. There is a BIG difference. If you oil a bolt and then torque it to the dry torque spec, you are certain to overtorque the bolt.