i All,
I am having trouble changing the cambelt on my st170. I have followed these instructions to the letter but struggling when tightening the inlet
pulley.
http://www.dj-sures.com/G
raphicFiles/Ford%20Focus%20Documentation/documentation/ford%20Manual%20Files/Cam%20Timing.html
I have locked the cam with the bar at the end, crankshaft pin in place, then used a spanner to lock the cam itself. then used an improvised device to
hold the pulley too. BUT when I tighten the torx bolt in the pulley to 120nm the VVT adjuster inside the pully moves the timing so that after I rotate
the crankshaft by two rotations, it is now out of alignment by some margin. Does anyone know the procedure for tightening the inlet pulley with vvt to
ensure timing is maintained
thanks
alex
Pretty sure Coozer (Steve) has played with his cam chain, maybe worth a u2u?
Cheers
Rich
120nm sounds quite a bit!
120 mn is the correct torque,is the vvt unit in its rest position ,sounds like you mite have it turned hence it moves when you tighten it ?
What happens is that when you tighten the pulley bolt to 120nm, it rotates the vvt mechanism even if you hold both the cam and pulley in position.
Then when you turn the crankshaft the exhaust cam starts turning before the inlet cam. You continue to rotate through two revolutions and then insert
the crank pin. The exhaust cam is perfectly aligned but the inlet cam is not. However putting a spanner on the inlet cam it can be turned
anticlockwise without the pulley turning against the VVT mechanism. This then puts the cam back into the correct position but upon turning the crank
again the inlet cam lags behind. Is this correct. still need help
thanks
alex
quote:
Originally posted by ianjenn
What happens is that when you tighten the pulley bolt to 120nm, it rotates the vvt mechanism even if you hold both the cam and pulley in position. Then when you turn the crankshaft the exhaust cam starts turning before the inlet cam. You continue to rotate through two revolutions and then insert the crank pin. The exhaust cam is perfectly aligned but the inlet cam is not. However putting a spanner on the inlet cam it can be turned anticlockwise without the pulley turning against the VVT mechanism. This then puts the cam back into the correct position but upon turning the crank again the inlet cam lags behind. Is this correct. still need help
thanks
alex