by gofaster » Fri Jan 06, 2006 2:21 am
99% of my work is on Harleys. I do most of them on the Serdi. I have 1" thick fixturing plates that carry 2 heads at a time. The plates help by making the set-up rigid, and reduce the chances of chatter. New seats cut like butter on my machine, but the old seats that are work-hardened can be a source of trouble. One way to skin those cats is to chase the profile with light single angle cuts to bring the seat close to the desired widths and depth, and then just kiss it with the finishing multi-angle cutter. If I get one that has hard spots and just wants to chatter, I'll rough it in with the Serdi, and finish it with the Hall-Toledo. The easy way out would be to pop new seats in the heads, and just do the gravy work on all new parts, but that's not fair to my customer. If I feel the old seats will clean up and be within valve stem protusion limits, then I'll do my best to save him the expense of installing new seats. For the largest part of my work the Serdi gets me where I want to go.
Before I got the Serdi, I was using the Hall-toledo for years. I learned that if I took my time, and got the seat nice and level using a bubble level that I made to fit over the pilot, that things sort of took care of themselves after that. If you are going to use a stone system, I feel that the Hall-Toledo is the way to go. It's easy to dress stones to any angle you want to use in your seat design, and the grinder has a nice feed system so you can keep your cuts light and watch where you're going.
Back in the late '70s or early '80s Harley was promoting the use of Neway cutters in their service manuals. Naturally, I had to go out and get a set. They take a lot of patience. I don't recommend them. I don't know why Harley was so thrilled with them. If you take your time, and work very carefully, you can get good results, but the problem is that you're hand turning the cutters and hand regulating the downforce. If you unconsciously favor or push more to one side, you end up with an out of round seat, and seat width that goes from wide on one side to narrow on the other. If it's all you have or all you can afford, you'll learn how to do a good job with them, but in my opinion, they are a royal pain.
I'm not sure if I'm answering your question or not but I hope I'm shedding some light on the subject for you.
I looked back at the old Speedtalk topic you posted about. All of the valve seat finishing methods they spoke of can get good results provided the guy doing the work has the necessary skill and talent to do it right, and is puttig out his best efforts. After years of using the Hall-Toledo grinder, I initially didn't like the Serdi, I thought I made a big $$$ mistake by even buying it. They sent a rep out to see me, and we worked together for a few days. When we were done, I knew what I could and couldn't do with my Serdi, and I loved it!
[B][I]
Jim