

Finally had a couple of degree above freezing weather so I could drain and refill my 20W50 Castrol GTX oil without it being too slow running. By the end there were actually wisps/hairs of oil from the container as little strands would semi-solidify.

Anyhow, I had to change the head gasket, YET AGAIN, because I started to burn coolant in around November or so and I just parked it as I knew my season was over as work was too busy for me to wrench then to save a month of the season. I still started it a few times in the garage and changed the intake manifold but since it was still leaking I knew it had to be the head. Then it became too cold and Christmas with the family took precedence, etc.
I'm hoping I didn't do any damage to the main bearing. The gasket became so bad after a few restarts that coolant literally poured down through the head into the cylinder and filled it (it was creepy dipping my inspection camera into liquid like that). Given enough time, the coolant then leaked down past the ring and its gap and started filling the oil pan. That's why I had to drain and refill everything, but I had to wait for the right time and weather.
Here's the old gasket:

I had the head recently machined and decked so I don't think that's the issue. I had blown head gasket with an older head, too. This is also the second intake I'm using to eliminate that as a possibility.
I've put on Allison's MLS (multi-layer steel) gasket with his stud kit for more clamping force so I hope it finally does the trick.
Worst case scenario would be a crack in the block, but I don't think that that would be an issue as it's fine and leak-free for a while and then the problem only shows up after a few months. I think it's a sealing issue as I didn't even have to "crack" the gasket to rock the head, it just lifted straight off and then the gasket was super easy to get off too, with no scraping or remnants.
I've had the head off so many times I could probably do it in my sleep.

Cheers,
phaetn