Reading the Hemi failure thread got me thinking of something that happened to me some years back. I did a job for a guy where I only did the lower end machining. I flow tested and CC’d his heads only. I sold him pistons and bored and decked the block. Checked piston to valve, degreed the cam, set ring gaps, balancing, and sold him gaskets and push rods. This was 15 to 1 compression, as requested. The customer put it all together. This is a 355 SBC with Pontiac heads
When it was getting picked up I expressed my concerns with the tune up as it was going to have a 200 HP shot of NO2 on the track. I was assured by him it would not be a problem. Off he went. I had a customer in the shop during this conversation and his comment was “bring a body bag!” LOL
OK first trip out the engine blew the gasket out the front of the head. Turns out the heads cracked front to rear above the short head bolts. The heads were extensively modified. Angle milled, head bolt holes welded and relocated. When I flowed the heads I had to remove the valves. I had noticed the heads had epoxy in the water jackets but I never investigated since I was not getting paid to inspect the heads, just flow them. Now, after the fact, the crack clearly was always there hence the epoxy.
Customer calls every shop in town and the consensus is I sold him the wrong gaskets. He wanted to sue me for the damage. I told him I would fix the heads but he had to pay the welder. He said no way and I better get my lawyer. The issue ended with me telling him “good luck with that” and that was the last I heard from him.
I tried to “help” the best I could but I wasn’t spending my money on his problem.
Lawyer or not, what can you do with a blown up race engine?



