What the problem is - is
There is a physical property of metal called elasticity and plasticity. If you stretch a bolt within its elastic limit then when it is allowed to go back to its orgional length it will do so. If you go beyond its elastic limit then it will NOT return to its orgional length, that is called taking the bolt into its plastic limit.
To hold torque cold or hot you have to keep the bolt in its elastic limit. I am NOT a engineer, but as I understand it the amount of stretch a bolt can take depends on a lot of factors. Some of those factors is the material the bolt is made of, the length of the bolt, and other factors.
A short bolt does not have the same amount it can be stretched and stay within its elastic limit as a long bolt has. That is why DC put LONG bolts in the manifold. They can stretch the amount of growth the manifold does when it gets hot and expands and still go back to their orgional length when it cools. They did not forsee tht the bolts would eventually rotate and hence the TSB using the stainless dog bone bolt keepers.
A short bolt like the cap bolts that came with my ATS manifold can not stretch as far as the manifold will grow when it gets hot AND go back to their orgional length and therefore they will stretch to their plastic limit and not go back to their orgional length when they cool. What this really means is they lose torque as they cool. When they are stretched in their length as the manifold boss gets thicker from heat they will hold well, then when the manifold shrinks when it cools they can not return to their orgional length and they lose the holding they had orgionally because they can not go that far back and shrink in length because they have gone beyone their elastic limit. My cap bolts actually fell out, like out on the road, out onto the manifold casting, etc.
Now when we put on the ATS manifold we can use the orgional bolts on all but #3 top & #4 top because of the interferance of the ATS manifold tubes with the OEM long bolts.
I found out with a HUGE amount of help from RUSTYJC that I could use a stud (short 52mm in my case) that would normally be stretched well past its elastic limit IF I used a washer package called Belleville washers. These washers are a little cone shaped but ARE DESIGNED to go from cone shape to flat and back to cone shape over and over and over ... again. They are specifically made to flatten and return to their orgional shape time after time after time ... . However they only each will absorbe a certain amount of the flattening needed, hence why you need 3 of these things. With a 3 belleville package each one of them taking some of the flattening (manifold growth with heat) together as a package, they all can handle the amount needed.
So to keep the short stud from going plastic because it can not stretch enough to handle the growth of the manifold boss we use 3 of these cone washers. The cone washers are actually what flattens as the manifold boss thickens with heat. When the manifold boss cools and gets thinner the cone washers to back to cone shape. Therefore you never change the torque because the stud is not being stretched beyond its limits.
Because the belleville (cone) washers are moving ever so small amount if you do not put something between them and your manifold boss they will cut a ring in the softer metal of the manifold boss. Not good. So put a sacrificial washer (stainless is what I used) between the belleville stack and the manifold.
Now the same thing does the same thing on the other end of the belleville stack up toward the lock nut. I did not want the belleville cutting into my lock nut so I put a sacrificial washer up there as well.
Now you have to put some kind of nut on this stack that will not rotate. Some have satety wired the nut, I used a Drake Lock nut, others use different kinds of lock nuts, whatever works and does not loosen with cycles.
That is why the Belleville washers. They are an industry standard designed to flatten and return to their orgional cone shape cycle after cycle.
Bob Weis
Luke, I put the TSB on mine to insure the OEM bolts would NOT EVER rotate, EVER. The TSB is thin stainless steel metal strip with a hole in each end slightly smaller than the OEM bolt head. You drive the undersized hole over the bolt head and it tears the metal to the shape of the bolt head and is held on by the metal that was torn to form the bolt head shape. However because it is formed to each head of the bolt (#1 #2 top, #1 #2 bottom, #3 #4 bottom, #5 #6 top, #5 #6 bottom) it keeps the OEM bolt from rotating.