Okay, what is the collective wisdom?
Do they need replacing for unleaded use or not?
I read adverts for Two-Valve Twins of a certain vintage and it's often stated that they have had the valve seats replaced to "run unleaded."
There's talk of valve seats becoming "hardened" by use and of "lead-memory."
One engine specialist, to whom I once took a pair of two-valve Boxer heads of uncertain provenance for "unleaded conversion" said that they didn't need to be changed (the valve seats were in good condition).
He said that aluminium heads have to have steel valve seats and that such valve seats are hard enough. He said that it's cast-iron heads where the valve seat is cut into the cast-iron that need steel inserts to safely use unleaded. (The fact that he turned-down the potential earner suggested to me that he wasn't telling porkies).

Do they need replacing for unleaded use or not?
I read adverts for Two-Valve Twins of a certain vintage and it's often stated that they have had the valve seats replaced to "run unleaded."
There's talk of valve seats becoming "hardened" by use and of "lead-memory."
One engine specialist, to whom I once took a pair of two-valve Boxer heads of uncertain provenance for "unleaded conversion" said that they didn't need to be changed (the valve seats were in good condition).
He said that aluminium heads have to have steel valve seats and that such valve seats are hard enough. He said that it's cast-iron heads where the valve seat is cut into the cast-iron that need steel inserts to safely use unleaded. (The fact that he turned-down the potential earner suggested to me that he wasn't telling porkies).

