No need to worry...take another look at the thread (especially the explanation in post #20) and you'll see that the myth is that removing the Air Injection system during desmog will cause (lead to) the valves burning.I eventually want to desmog the fj60, but now this worries me.... Ah well something else to research and learn.
Instead, as Jim points out in post #20, there are two root causes for valves burning:
"There are 2 things which burn the exhaust valve:
1. Tight adjustment, which does not let the valve come into solid contact w/ the cold seat long enough to drop the temp of the valve.
2. A lean combustion event that leaves superheated oxygen in the chamber. When the exhaust valve pops open and the glowing hot oxygen goes past the exhaust valve it attacks it in the same manner as an oxy-fuel cutting torch.
The AP can not stop the valve burning, because the valve burns when it is open. When the exhaust valve cracks open and cylinder blowdown begins, flaming hot gas is leaving at near sonic velocity and several hundred PSI. A little squirt of fresh air downstream of the valve is less than insignificant at that critical moment.
The valve can not burn if there is no free oxygen left in the chamber after combustion. If the mixture is correct or richer, valves don't burn. If the mixture is 18:1, and the valves are not Stellite or another inox alloy, then they are toast."
So, I think by cleaning (Seafoam etc.) and adjusting the valves each year you can mitigate #1 from happening.
And making sure that you don't have any vac leaks and that the carb is tuned correctly so that you are running 14:1 mixture and NOT a lean 18:1 mixture, then you are mitigating #2 from happening...
...I wonder if there is a way to directly measure air:fuel mixture?
Also, I'd still like to find out:
What constitutes a tight/loose valve (and how is it measured....for example, one thousandth or two thousandth off spec?)?
What are the implications of running loose valves?
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