valve adjustment
Jay Loeppke
jloeppke at charter.net
Sat Jan 13 19:29:10 PST 2007
Brings up a another question. How do I measure or tell that the
Cam chain has proper tension. It looks stock to me. At a quick
glance the Service manual doesn't tell how to measure this.
On Jan 13, 2007, at 9:15 PM, Steve Northrop wrote:
> You can end up skipping a tooth on the cam sprockets because all
> the slack in the cam chain will move to the non-tensioned side of
> the chain. If the wonderful adjuster we are discussing as is not up
> to par, there could be considerable slack and the chain could skip
> a tooth, messing up your cam timing terribly.
>
> Steve in Western NY
> '96 GPZ1100
> '02 Daytona 955i
> "You Can't Fix Stupid", Ron White
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Dave Daniels
> To: Steve Northrop ; GPZ LIST
> Sent: Saturday, January 13, 2007 10:04 PM
> Subject: Re: valve adjustment
>
>
> Steve,
> What's the consequence of rotating the engine clockwise (backward) ?
>
> Steve Northrop <blackgpz at rochester.rr.com> wrote:
> When I set my valves, I use the second method you describe,
> Jay. It's
> important that the rocker arm be on the base circle of the cam
> to get
> accurate clearances. I agree with you that a couple of the
> rockers look
> awful close to being on part of the lobe when using the "2
> position" method.
> I turn the engine so the cam lobes on the pair I want to check
> are opposite
> the rockers. Then I know for sure I'm on the base circle of the
> cam before
> clearance checking. Using this method also allows me to do all
> the intakes
> then all the exhausts instead of hopscotching around the
> cylinder head. It
> may take a few minutes more but your valve clearances will be
> more exact.
> Just remember to always turn the motor forward (counter-
> clockwise as you
> look at the engine from the timing cover side). If you
> overshoot, go around
> again, don't back it up. And don't forget to take the rag out
> of the cam
> chain tunnel opening before putting the valve cover back on. I
> forgot once,
> it wasn't pretty.
>
> Steve in Western NY
> '96 GPZ1100
> '02 Daytona 955i
> "You Can't Fix Stupid", Ron White
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Jay Loeppke"
> To: "GPZ LIST"
> Sent: Saturday, January 13, 2007 8:54 PM
> Subject: valve adjustment
>
>
>> Another question for all you helpful GPZ owners out there, (You
>> helped me
>> through the carbs last time). I'am checking my valve clearance,
>> between
>> the helpful chart, instuctions found on the GPZ list and my service
>> manual its going pretty good. I am a little puzzeled though at one
>> point. I am sure I found TDC for the two position to check all
>> valves.
>> the problems lies with the #4 cylinder exhaust valves and #2 intake
>> valves, the positon of the cam lobes do not look like there in the
>> right
>> positon and there is no clearance at theses points. Every other point
>> makes sense. Other than #2 intake valves, all the rest are in
>> tolerance.
>> all the Exhaust valves are a "little" tight (.05-.07mm) with the
>> exception of #4 which is zero. So I decided to check another way, and
>> that is by putting the point of the cam lobe 180 degrees away from
>> the
>> basket. I checked all this way. All the measurements were the same
>> except for the #2 intake (0 clearance before) now falls within
>> tolerances
>> like the rest, and the # 4 exhaust vales are a "little" tight like
>> the
>> rest also. What should I go by. Once I decide I will pull the needed
>> shims.
>> This bike has 35k and I do not know the history of the so I'am
>> going through the bike.
>>
>> thanks,
>>
>> Jay
>
>
>
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