MAN 51039010338 GASKET CYLINDER
Product Specifications
| MAN | 51039010338 |
| MAN | 51039010382 |
The GASKET CYLINDER is a precision-formed elastomeric sealing element that creates a leak-proof boundary between the valve cover and the cylinder head mating face, preventing engine oil from escaping the valve train cavity into the engine bay under the thermal cycling, vibration, and mild crankcase pressure conditions of normal engine operation. The gasket is typically manufactured from a single piece of moulded EPDM or nitrile rubber with integral metal carrier inserts at the bolt hole positions — the metal inserts provide a defined crush zone that prevents over-compression of the rubber body while ensuring consistent sealing contact pressure around the full perimeter, including the critical corner radii where the gasket turns 90 degrees and where oil leaks most commonly originate. On engines where the spark plugs are recessed into tubes in the valve cover, the gasket incorporates spark plug tube seal rings bonded into the main gasket body — these tube seals must form a complete O-ring seal around each tube bore to prevent oil from migrating down the tube to the spark plug recess, where it fouls the plug electrode and causes misfires. The gasket profile exactly follows the mating face geometry of the specific engine's valve cover and cylinder head, including all bolt boss recesses, camshaft bearing cap profiles, and PCV port apertures.
This unit — MAN 51039010338 — is manufactured to OEM-equivalent specifications: overall gasket perimeter profile, rubber compound Shore hardness and oil and temperature resistance, metal carrier insert positions and crush height, spark plug tube seal bore diameter and seal lip geometry where applicable, and bolt hole positions and diameters are matched to the original part. Supplied as a complete set including all tube seals and any supplementary corner seals required for this engine application. Available wholesale from 0.18 USD, MOQ 1 pcs, production lead time 55-105 days.
Valve cover gaskets fail through rubber hardening and loss of elasticity from sustained heat cycling above the rubber's rated temperature threshold — a process that reduces the gasket's ability to conform to minor surface irregularities in the mating faces; through compression set where the rubber permanently deforms to the shape of the bolt clamp zone and loses the springback required to maintain sealing pressure as the cover thermally expands and contracts; and through chemical attack from incompatible engine oil additives that swell or degrade the rubber compound. A seeping valve cover gasket that drips onto the exhaust manifold is a fire risk that must be addressed promptly — the oil burns off before reaching the ground, creating a persistent oil smell and an invisible but flammable oil mist in the engine bay.
- Allow the engine to cool fully before removing the valve cover — the valve cover and cylinder head retain heat for an extended period after shutdown; removing the cover from a hot engine allows oil mist to escape and risks burns from hot surfaces; fitting a gasket to a hot, thermally expanded cover produces incorrect compression set on the new rubber before the assembly cools to its nominal dimensions.
- Clean both the cylinder head gasket groove and the valve cover sealing face meticulously after removing the old cover — use a plastic scraper for aluminium and a brass scraper for cast iron to remove all traces of old gasket material, silicone sealant residue, and oil film; finish with brake cleaner on a lint-free cloth; even a thin film of old RTV sealant or oil on the seating surface prevents the new gasket from achieving consistent contact and guarantees a repeat leak.
- Apply RTV sealant only at the specific locations required by the OEM service procedure — these are typically the four semi-circular recesses at the front and rear cam seal interfaces and the junction points where the cam bearing cap meets the head surface; never apply RTV along the full gasket perimeter as excess sealant is squeezed into the oil circuit on assembly, where it breaks off and blocks oil return passages or deposits on cam journal surfaces.
- Seat the new gasket in the valve cover groove before bringing the cover to the engine — press the gasket firmly into its retaining groove around the complete perimeter including all corner radii and spark plug tube seal positions; a gasket that partially pops out of the groove at a corner during installation will be pinched and torn as the cover is lowered, producing an immediate leak at that position on first engine start.
- Tighten all valve cover bolts in the centre-outward spiral sequence specified by the OEM — torque in two passes: first pass to half the final torque value to seat the gasket uniformly, second pass to the full OEM value; never exceed the specified torque as overtightening on polymer covers crushes the bolt hole inserts and permanently prevents correct gasket compression on any future replacement; typical torque values are 6–12 Nm depending on cover material.
- Install the new GASKET CYLINDER (MAN 51039010338), allow any RTV to cure for the specified period before starting the engine, reconnect all PCV hoses and ignition coils, start the engine and run to operating temperature, then inspect the full gasket perimeter and all spark plug tube positions for oil seepage under the valve cover before returning the vehicle to service.
| Part | Reason for Combined Replacement |
|---|---|
| Spark Plugs OEM ref. varies by engine | Spark plugs are fully accessible when the valve cover is removed on engines with recessed plug tubes, and any plugs that have been contaminated with oil from failed tube seals must be replaced — oil-fouled plugs continue to misfire and produce carbon deposits even after the tube seals are renewed. Combining plug replacement with the gasket service completes a full upper engine service in a single disassembly and eliminates misfires as a symptom after the repair. |
| PCV Valve and Crankcase Ventilation Hose OEM ref. varies by engine | The PCV valve mounted in or on the valve cover and the crankcase ventilation hoses are accessible during valve cover removal and should be inspected or replaced simultaneously. A blocked PCV valve creates crankcase pressure that forces oil past correctly fitted valve cover and rear main seals — the most common cause of gasket leaks recurring shortly after replacement. Renewing the PCV valve at every valve cover gasket service eliminates crankcase overpressure as a contributing factor to future leaks. |
| Ignition Coils or HT Leads OEM ref. varies by ignition system type | Ignition coils seated in the spark plug tubes are removed during valve cover gasket replacement and are the primary components at risk from plug tube seal failure — oil ingress into the coil well degrades the coil body rubber and can arc from the coil body to the tube wall, damaging the coil internally. Any coil showing oil contamination on its lower body or misfire codes on the affected cylinder should be replaced simultaneously with the gasket set. |