Interesting thing happened that I felt would be important to share with other DIYers out there. I was helping my buddy replace the exhaust components on his '95 370DA with 7.4s. All new OEM Merc parts. Got the manifold installed and torqued no problem. In fiddling with the riser blocks and elbows, two of the manifolds cracked during torquing of the top nuts (before we even got to 30 ft-lbs) - one of the four threaded holes on two different manifolds cracked - so out of 16 bolt holes, 2 stripped and cracked the casting. I have to preface the discussion with a disclaimer - Jon has had these elbows and risers off probably 10x for gasket replacement and I had done mine probably 4x, so we are not new to this process. Additionally we used proper torque settings and tightened the bolts evenly and slowly.
SO, fast forward a week later. Back to the marina with two shiny new manifolds (the dealer gave him one gratis as a replacement from Merc, but not both). During the installation, guess what happens? The first one we put on cracks one bolt hole again! Now we're fit to be tied. Before we proceed we take a look at the second new manifold which was still in the box. After closer examination of the manifold and the new bolts that he purchased, we noticed that some of the black paint (e-coating?) ran down into the threads. Also, the bolts come through with the threads pre-coated with some sort of red sealant that is very stiff. So before we F up another manifold, we get the tap and die set out and clean all the threads (bolts and manifolds). After that, everything proceeded as normal with no further problems.
For those of you taking on this job, I'd say it's VERY important to chase ALL the threads, despite the fact that the parts are brand new. We all know that threads need to be chased and bolts need to be cleaned before re-install when replacing gaskets. But new stuff apparently has to be done in the same manner for two reasons...
1. paint and sealant create too much resistance
2. paint and sealant likely give a falsely high torque reading b/c of the gunk that accumulates.