KiDo_Tuning wrote:Yes Alexei, boost is inlet manifold pressure not the amount of air in the combustion chamber... If you had 22psi and only got 2.5g/rev of airflow fill into the cylinder then obviously your not stressing the engine. Tuning to 22psi on a VF52 WRX and having 3.6g/rev on E85 with FLKC range only going to 3.2g/rev can lift heads, no FLKC recorded to hear the heads clapping back onto the block so hard to diagnose hence why you can make the extra torque without running huge timing that can lift heads on first tap of high EGT preignition
I ran 22psi on E85 at 2700 to 3600rpm with the TD04 with stock motor for over a year and was on 19psi with TD05-16g on E85. I only fitted studs after pulling the motor out to fit the TS headers and suspect HG issue. It turned out to be a split coolant hose leaking and the HG's were fine. In fact workshop reused the HG's when fitting the new studs

Also, my current engine is still in the car and running fine as a few guys can attest. 2 years of E85 abuse and 70,000km's on stock block
New engine was simply because the Forester is now mine and I wanted more power, implying it it because the engine is dead/dying is wrong

I will refit that engine if I ever decide to sell the car.
Using your non-stock headstud block to prove that stock headbolts can handle e85 is insane, dude. I know you know that we know that it doesn't make any sense.
Anyway two things don't add up.
You say you took out the engine for a leaking coolant hose? I had 2 leaking coolant hoses last week, and all I needed to do was run the engine until I pinpointed the leak. Replace hose and retest. I don't know anyone who takes a out an EJ255 to find a leaky coolant hose... - that doesn't make any sense, unless... you were rating the chance of a blown HG as quite probable. So then why tell others it's very unlikely?
Secondly - while you claim it's safe to run e85 on a stock engine with 170k on it....you installed stronger headstuds on an engine with 70k or less....why would someone spend $300-700 on new stronger studs, while they can't be bothered spending $100 on new headgaskets? It's a pretty purposeful move, wouldn't you say? And just happens to be the main weakness of the EJ block against e85.
Could you please show us a full stock block lib that has been running e85 for more than 2 years? Better yet - show us 5 or 10 . Until then, it doesn't matter what psi number you put up or what engine load you claim is safe - there's no real life evidence for it. You don't know what cylinder pressure it takes to stretch any given headbolt, because you don't know the tensile strength left in them after 170k, you can only guess...and do people really want to put a $5k wager on your guess? Why should they - when you didn't run the stock bolts yourself - because you didn't want to have to worry about it.
In the meantime, to start with, I can name you 5 libs that have blown engines on e85.