I suspect you have never worked with them. A 320 grit brush hone does NOT remove metal and therefore cannot affect roundness. It is a glaze breaking hone, NOT a boring hone like a sunnen. You would have to crazy agressive to take off even .0003. It is however strong enough to fully remove the coke without removing metal. Thats why it is the right tool for the job. It doesn’t take it to a round shape made up of some metal and some coke. It removes all coke and takes it back to its natural out of round shape.
Larry, I own a pretty large aerospace machine shop for a living…so yes, I have used flex hones many times. As well as Sunnens, and many many more methods of extremely close tolerance bores that would have no place in our old engines.
‘I disagree that a flex hone corrects the coking issue efficiently or safely, and I have never seen a flex hone accomplish returning a non-round hole to round.
Flex hones are used to attain a specific cross hatch, or occasional a specified surface finish.
A reamer with a pilot also has a small radius on the corner of the flutes. A reamer will cut round to the delta of the bushing diameter and the reamer, divided in half…meaning a bushing with .001 delta, will cut to a .0005 tolerance due to the chip load balance on the cutting flutes.
Again…no dog in the fight. If guys want to follow advice other than the manufacturers on an experimental engine…no sweat.
I don’t believe an approved repair facility would do so.
You are making this only sound like carbon buildup though and I don’t think is correct. In the presence of high heat, various bromides and carbon…essentially a heat treat carburization occurs to some degree. As the valve picks up various deposits, some help, such as lead bromides and others hurt, tightening the clearance over time, till we get the morning sickness.
The fix is to restore the proper clearance.
Advice posted on a forum finds various levels of technical skill sets…I will continue to maintain that following the manufacturers advice for the service bulletin is the best path.
That’s all.