"later went to a 40/BB and ran at 80 with 85 drive". whats "80 with 85 drive" mean?
40/BB=Hx40 and a Big Brother for a bottom charger.
80 with 85 drive=80lbs of boost with 85lbs of drive pressure(exhaust pressure)
Also whats a "41 or 51 wire but with less protrusion" mean?
41 thousandth stainless o-ring wire with less protrusion means less of the wire protruding from the head itself. Or more easily explained,the o-rings are using a 41 thousandth wire and have the head deeper cut so less wire protrudes from it. Most guys use a 41 wire and leave about 10 out,some go more some go less,depends on the wire and the machine shop.
Mark. .
Most will tell you that o-rings are good up to about 70psi on a regular basis,however,I have also seen some fail at that also. It depends on the driver,truck and how fat he is on the pedal and for how long. Long shots of high boost will usually lead to failure with o-rings.
KAlder. .
Even though your ability to get a "buy" on a set of B-D twins spikes your interest,the money spent there could be better utilized to prep you bullet for them later. While I do also understand that you want them and its your truck,without the addition of o-rings and/or head studs the twins would never perform up to their capabilities. Todays diesel performance market has so many good quality hard charging singles,why coin out for twins when you will never use them up to what they need to be?. A hard charging single will do what you want and allow you the coin for other parts to bullet proof your ride for later twins additions. At one time to make power you needed the twins,with that now not the case many owners have been taking them off for the big singles,Jim is one of those. Just a thought for you to ponder.....
BTW,Just because you have studs and orings or fire rings doesn't mean you will need to retorque at each service. Done the right way the first time a occasional check is all they will require... ... ... ... ..... Andy