Before we start: If you're building a Cison V8 Pro and you're completely confused about which way the valve stem oil seals should go in, congratulations — you're not alone. The manual is unclear, the official assembly video contradicts itself, and forum threads go on for days without a real conclusion. This blog cuts straight to the answer.
Why Is Everyone So Confused?
The confusion comes from three places:
- The manual illustration is too vague — the instruction "groove side down" gives no clear reference point for orientation
- The Youtube assembly video shows the seals being installed one way, then a caption pops up mid-video saying "this was an error, they should be installed the opposite way" — essentially the official source contradicting itself
- "Up" and "down" mean different things depending on whether you're referencing the head sitting on the bench during assembly, or as it sits mounted on the engine — and people in these discussions are never talking about the same thing
So instead of arguing about it, let's just look at what the two orientations actually are.
The Two Orientations Explained
The valve stem oil seal has two distinct ends: a closed end (solid cap-like top) and an open end (the double-lip side, wider opening).
| Orientation | Result | |
|---|---|---|
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Closed end facing up (toward valve face) | Best sealing performance, harder to install |
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Open end facing up (toward spring/keeper end) | Easier to install, slightly less effective |
The Verdict
Image 1 (closed end toward the valve face) provides better sealing — but is harder to install.
Image 2 (open end toward the spring/keeper) is easier to install and works slightly less effectively — but the difference is small.
For most builders, Image 2 is perfectly fine. You won't notice a meaningful difference in oil consumption during normal operation.
Why Does Image 1 Seal Better? (Quick Theory)
During the intake stroke, the cylinder creates negative pressure (vacuum) that acts on the valve stem seal.
- Image 1: The vacuum pulls the seal lips inward and tighter against the valve stem → better seal
- Image 2: The vacuum acts in the opposite direction, so the lip pressure is slightly reduced
This is the same principle used in full-size automotive engines — the seal lip should always face the direction the pressure or oil is coming from. The lip is designed to be pressed tighter under load, not pulled away.
Installation Tips
Image 1 is trickier to seat properly. Here's how to make it easier:
- Lubricate generously: Use engine assembly lube or clean motor oil on the inside of the seal and the top of the valve guide
- Use a wooden tool: A small wooden dowel works well for pressing the seal in — avoid metal tools that can nick or tear the lip
- Keep it straight: Make sure the seal is aligned with the guide before pressing — don't force it in at an angle
- Optional: Lightly chamfer the top edge of the valve guide with a Dremel to help the seal slide in more smoothly
⚠️ Do NOT use sharp or metal objects to push the seal in. A damaged lip defeats the whole purpose of the seal.
Quick Reference
| Your Situation | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Want the best result and feel confident | Go with Image 1 |
| First build, want it simple and stress-free | Image 2 is fine |
| Already installed Image 2 and it's running well | Leave it alone |
Either orientation beats installing them completely wrong — as long as the lips aren't folded or inverted, the engine will run. The difference between Image 1 and Image 2 is modest, not catastrophic.
Hopefully this saves you a few hours of forum rabbit holes. Happy building — may your Cison V8 fire up on the first crank. 🔧
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