Back to compression ratio discussions...I happened across something that gives me an idea. While thicker head gaskets don't seem to be offered (I might not be French enough to find them), this site sells a
0.5mm "Cylinder head copper shim" for the same engine family, directed at the A110 and R12.
Assuming nothing lost in translation, that implies someone has figured out how to make a simple head shim work with the rubber oil sealing gasket. Maybe the answer is just RTV silicone, it seems solvable regardless with low crankcase pressure.
Given the more complex interface on the block side, I think I would put the normal head gasket on the block and a shim on top of that, with the standard copper spray some people seem to swear by.
I would need a shim of ~0.8 to 1.1mm, slightly thicker than what's usually offered (0.020 in or 0.5mm seems to be the standard, including some newer engines).
Lotus's shop manual specifies a maximum of 0.3mm removal, stricter than I've seen elsewhere, implying their camshaft modifications further eat into the margin. That's what sent me on this investigation while examining camshaft geometry and my 1.07mm shaved head.
Manufacturing isn't an issue, but I need to figure out if either steel or copper makes more sense. I feel like annealed copper is a "safer" choice for sealing, and there aren't any super close bore spacings that sometimes blow out weak gaskets, like on the classic Minis. Most concerned about water leaks honestly.
I have some backup ideas for a custom, thicker rubber oil seal as well, or maybe extend the shim to increase the thickness of everything on the head, not just the head gasket area.
Thoughts? Murmurs of other people doing this? I know some manufacturers had an OEM shim kit like this in the 60s to lower compression, but Renault seems to have addressed that though dedicated engine variants, so I don't expect to find an example in their manuals.
It seems like this solves more problems than machining down the pistons, and is fully reversible without removing the engine in case it fails. Happy to put money in someone's pocket for a head and then rebuilding it if I absolutely have to (I see you Richard48Y, and those alloy rims).
If I just slapped the head on with domed pistons, it would be 11.1 CR, which is probably fine going by JB's comment earlier in the topic,
but if I wore a cam lobe flat...the engine is coming out, or a hole saw is going into the firewall.