Sounds like you are getting localised coolant boiling on shutdown, which I would not point the finger of doom at the head gasket or the head, as long as the pressurisation is just happening at shutdown and not during running.
Localised boiling could be happening in your turbo if you are running a watercooled turbo. I can't remember what hybrid type you had made... But if it is watercooled, then you might be best off running a 944 turbo electric waterpump which is set to keep circulating coolant through the turbo on shut down.
It can also be caused by poor oil cooling. If your oil cooling is marginal, then the coolant will have to absorb all the heat of the engine in shutdown, as the oil will already be at a higher temperature, possibly to hot to allow a thermal pathway from the engines deep internal parts to the oil, which could litterally be glowing, leaving the coolant as the only thermal release path... The ideal engine oil temperature, should be around 100 degrees C when running, and the coolant at about 85 degrees C, however the coolant will boil at 100 degrees C at atmospheric pressure, higher with a good pressure cap, where as the oil will not boil until much higher temperatures, meaning the oil can be a good heat soak for the block, especially at drawing heat from the block and sump heat sink combination when the temperature soaking out of the bores etc exceed 100 degrees.. as long as the oil is not hotter than that already.
The next thing would be the pressure cap, make sure its a Berh one, not a cheap copy, your car will need a good pressure cap with a good reliable pressure blow off.. I have seen lots of aftermarket ones release pressure too early, which means your coolant is not running at the correct pressure, even after shutdown, which will lower the boiling point of the coolant.
Ignition timing, even though your problem is happening on shutdown, could be a real issue. If it is too retarded, you could have some seriously glowing exhaust valves, even following a period of idle, which will dump their heat into the valve guide, into the head and into the coolant in the head, causing localised boiling of the coolant. A poorly timed 924 non turbo, can make the exhaust manifold glow red, without even driving it, just having it ticking over at idle.. So, if your ignition is retarded at idle, to provide a little less advance on boost, you could be giving your valves a serious amount of heat, which can eventually also become an ignition source and cause detonation as well as pre-ignition.
What is your idle mixture? If it is set to Porsche tolerances, it can cause a loss of performance as well as too lean an idle, as the original fuel chemistry available in 1981 was much different to what we have today, you need to run their idle mixture a little richer than you would back when the car was new, but also you want to use some of the additional fuel to cool the valves at idle, which would also help them recover after boost.
What is your shutdown proceedure? are you using a turbo timer to let the car idle for a while before shutdown? either an electronic one, or just your own manual methods?
Have you turned your ignition back on after shut down to watch the temperature gauge? Localised boiling may not show up on the instruments, as you might have a problem where the coolant is fizzing around the exhaust ports, but elsewhere in the engine it may be normal, this will cause additional pressure and lots of bubbles in the coolant, which will increase pressure as vapourised coolant takes up more space than when it is in its liquid form.
You could plumb a 944 turbo electric water pump between your heater hoses, with a RC timer and two relays to make a simple device to run the pump for a couple on mins after shutdown, this will cause coolant movement after shutdown, but if you have a watercooled turbo, then placing it there with the same electrical controls would be a good idea, but possibly setting it up to run whenever the engine is running, as well as for 2 mins after shutdown would be good.
The worry I have, is that you can see your engine is burning oil, which would have been ok in the first 1000 miles at most, but after that, the signs of oil burning should have burnt off and your piston crowns and combustion chamber should be looking very different.
I am also concerned that your pistons, do not seem to providing the right squish and swirl I would want to see leaving whitness marks on the combustion surfaces.
If could be you are running a little too rich, which is causing an excessive boundary layer on the combustion surfaces, as well as washing the bores.
Or it could be the current level of tune is bringing on some combustion with poor form or flame front speed or distribution, which could be the onset of detonation (not audable with det cans) which is causing piston ring flutter due to poor cylinder pressure distribution.
Lastly, the oil reminants and consumption could be due to excessive crankcase pressure, which could be an engine build issue, but more likely you have exceeded the capibilities of the current crankcase breathing circuit.
You have a few issues there, and I hope some of this has given you some pointers to the route to sorting them out and improving the car in more ways than just rectifying the current issues you know about.
_________________ Clean it, wax it, love it, ENJOY it... then fix it
Jon Mitchell Independent Porsche Specialists Technical Advisors to TIPEC http://www.jmgporsche.co.uk https://twitter.com/JMG_PORSCHE http://www.facebook.com/jmgporsche
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