on my kent, i've added a adjustable cam gear and adjusted the cam timing a bit
do i set the valve clearance at TDC for the crank, or TDC for the cam?
what would he results of this be, cause surely the maximum valve lift is no longer at TDC on the crank?
You adjust the clearances when the valves are rocking so it would now be when the cam is at TDC as the cam is acting on the pushrods creating the
movement regardless of where the crank is in relation to it.
I would expect....
(Disclaimer!!)
Tappets should be set with the crank at TDC on the firing stroke.
So if No.4 is on the rock set no.1 and vice versa, same for 2 & 3. Doing it like this means you can set all the valves no matter how many
cylinders the engine has with only 2 revolutions of the crank.
The other way to do it is to turn the crank until you see a valve fully open, mark the crank and then turn the crank 1 revolution and set the valve
which was previously open.
Don't bother with crap like the rule of 9 or stuff like that it's not 100% reliable whereas the two methods above are.
Davie
quote:
Originally posted by daviep
Don't bother with crap like the rule of 9 or stuff like that it's not 100% reliable whereas the two methods above are.
Correct!
It took me ages to work out why I was only getting 2 cylinders firing, until I researched and found out that the Xflow bucks the 1342 trend.
Felt a bit silly as i swapped the HT leads over on 2 and 3.
Ed.