#1. overheating rubber totally cooked to stiff solid (350++ F. degrees)
Nope. The engine ran beautifully, still runs beautifully, and has never overheated in the slightest.
#2. under torque - due to not re-torquing after multiple heat cycles - the cylinders moved between the head and case block breaking the brittle overheated paper.
Nope. The gasket was not overheated, and the cylinder head was faithfully re-torqued at the specified mileages.
#3 over torque can do similar effects to the base gasket too.
Nope.
I have used veshrah for many many years. I have torn down my own engines years after the build- kawasaki dealership work order history - air and liquid cooled engines- to have all o rings in plyable condition and lots of work scraping the base gasket that sealed itself to the aluminum.
I have also used Vesrah many times with excellent results. The reason I posted originally is that this is a recent and surprising change for the worse in the quality of their materials and manufacturing. I have no way of knowing if its an isolated case, or just one bad lot.
I have yet to have any complaints to the quality of the vesrah product.
never got a bad set in over 18 years.
See above. Now you've seen a credible complaint, a couple of them, and I definitely got bad parts, specifically the o-rings. I suspect there are many other bad sets out there as well.
heat and pressure will turn coal into diamonds. heat and pressure damaged your gaskets and o rings. (or lack of proper pressure)
Nope, shoddy materials destroyed the o-rings and the gasket. The engine was never over heated, and nothing was ever over- or under-torqued.
As I posted above, the cam chain tunnel o-ring crumbled to powder when touched. Yes, it was properly installed. No, I did not attack it with a blow torch at any point. To be fair, this area was not leaking -- the head gasket was sufficient to seal it.
However, the o-rings at the rear corners were badly swollen, and the base gasket was extremely brittle, and shattered to pieces at a touch -- more brittle than I've seen any OEM gasket, even on engines 30 years old.
The corner o-rings swelled and softened to the point that they crumpled inward and allowed oil to contact the base gasket, whereupon the oil started seeping from a crack in the brittle base gasket.
After sitting on my bench overnight, the o-rings returned to a more normal size, but were still damaged. I have compared new Suzuki o-rings directly with new Vesrah o-rings, and the vesrah o-rings are smaller in diameter and thickness. The Suzuki o-rings I installed fit perfectly in the space available, while Vesrah o-rings have excess room around the o-rings.
One other possibility you didn't mention was chemical attack. At no point was there anything except clean engine oil in my bike, and no, there was never a gasoline leak or any gas in the oil for any reason. No harsh chemicals were ever used to clean the bike, nor was a hot engine ever sprayed with cold water. The bike was ridden daily and perfectly maintained, although I will admit that I rarely clean it.
better luck next time and get rid of the haynes/clymer toilet paper books- they cause more trouble than they solve for non trained technitions.
Nope. The manuals had nothing to do with poor o-ring and gasket materials, and their instructions and specs for installation and torquing the gaskets, o-rings, cylinders, and head are identical to the factory manual. I am far from inexperienced.
Luck's got nothing to do with it and there won't be a next time -- I will not purchase any more Vesrah gasket kits, and I carefully described my experiences here so that others may have the information to make their decisions.
My conclusion based on many past good experiences with Vesrah gasket kits is that Vesrah recently started using shoddy materials in parts of their gasket kits, and therefore should not be used. You can use the information I've presented and make your own conclusions.
Perhaps they've fixed the problems, and perhaps they haven't. It's not worth the risk to me, and I've since learned that the Suzuki gasket kit is far more complete as well as higher quality, and is thus a much better value. Suzuki gaskets also fit much better.
I actually have an unopened Vesrah gasket kit that I bought when I was preparing to fix the base gasket leak. When I disassembled the engine and found the defects, I ordered OEM gaskets and o-rings before reassembling the engine.
I don't feel that I can ethically sell a potentially defective gasket kit to anyone else, so it remains on my shelf unopened. I might use one of the case gaskets from the kit at some point, but never any of the internal gaskets or o-rings.
(But if after reading all this, someone is still convinced that Vesrah gaskets are high quality, I'll make you a great deal on that Vesrah kit...
I installed Suzuki o-rings and base gaskets last September and the base gasket area has remained oil-tight for the last 6,000+ miles. This rules out the casting or gasket surface defect theory.
However, I made the poor decision of installing a Cometic head gasket since I could not source a Suzuki head gasket at the time, and the shoddy Cometic head gasket is now weeping around the corners where the oil passages are. So far, not enough to drip on the ground, but enough to make the sides of the engine dirty. I'll get annoyed enough to replace the head gasket with a Suzuki OEM item at some point soon.
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