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3 answers

So what symptom prompt you to this repair procedure? Steam in the exhaust? water in the oil? I fuel line release tool to remove the fuel lines. Completely drain coolant then remove the intake top fuel injectors & ring line and manifold now remove rusted exhaust nuts both sides remove valve covers rocker arms and pull out the push rods keep anything out of the valve covers in order to put back exactly where it was. Next remove the cyl head bolts loosen heads pry up remove heads with exhaust manifolds. I own a 2006 holden manaro, GTO here in America Mate! Small block Chevy heads about a 4 on the 1 to10 scale.

2006-09-15 13:27:53 · answer #1 · answered by John Paul 7 · 0 0

Depends on the year - things got a bit more complex in the late 90s, but if it's a late 80s model, it should be pretty straightforward. I still wouldn't do it unless you are mechanically inclined and have the right tools- it's a long job, with annoying little things that can go wrong. Also, you'll need two gaskets, left and right, and replace both, even if only one is leaky.

2006-09-15 13:11:15 · answer #2 · answered by Tahini Classic 7 · 0 0

yep take it to a mechanic easy matey.

2006-09-15 13:09:57 · answer #3 · answered by GOOCH 4 · 0 0

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