is is fuel mixture, timming, turbo settings?
please you technical fiends enlighten my enquiring mind

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Hey ho sounds very technical. Here is my explanation a lump of silicon gasket sealent used in the coolent system for thermostat housing /coolent pump& other flanges. Seriously this happened when some of this silicon sealent was curculating and blocked up a coolent hole in the cylinder head.The effect caused overheating on the head.Wolfsburg Willy wrote:I agree with you on this one Peasant. Technology has come a long way in the twenty or so years that our vans have existed and engine design is far better understood nowadays. Some engines designed in the 80's had inherent faults such as cylinder head hot-spots or cooling system weaknesses that meant that they would sooner or later, under certain conditions, fail. Bearing in mind that it can take up to five years between conception and the mass production of an engine, the JX engine design could be older than we think! It would be too much for any Engine Design Team to consider what the consequence of excessive carbon deposits or worn valve seats would be in twenty years time. We do not as a routine maintenance item remove, decoke and inspect cylinder heads at, say, 150,000 miles/15 years 'cos (a) "if it ain't broke - don't fix it!" and (b) Mr. Volkswagen didn't say that there was any requirement to do so. So the answer to your question Damon is yes, all those things! As Peasant says "Proper timing, turbo boost, injection and valve clearances" plus head decoke including injectors, using the correct coolant, correct head tightening if the head's been off etc. etc. etc. Do any of us know the full history of our engines if we haven't owned them from new (or rebuilt them)? Don't worry about it, just fit another head and get on with enjoying your van!!