Dude!
That's what he said he did.
I decided I needed to look. Got the coolant drained, valve cover and timing cover off. Will wait for daylight to have another go at it. Can't see the alignment marks.raYzerman wrote: ↑Wed Apr 28, 2021 7:06 pm Dude! Rule #1 is to zip tie the crank sprocket for CCT and shim changes.... Chain very loose when cam rolled out. OK, go for that ride and see what the horsepower verdict is..... that is going to tell you whether you have a valve timing problem. If it struggles to pull 7000 rpm in 3rd or 4th or takes too long to get there........ unfortunately, no other way to tell but pull the valve cover and right timing cover......... if anything is off it's likely one tooth off at the crankshaft sprocket.
I guess I'll play with it and see what works. Just figured if you can accidently skip a tooth with a CCT swap, you should be able to move the chain deliberately to retime. Probably easier to get it right removing the ignition trigger wheel, slipping the chain off, moving the cam sprockets and putting the chain back on but I think I would be more comfortable removing the cam caps if something has to come apart. Would zip tie again to make sure the intake and exhaust cams remain in time with respect to each other.raYzerman wrote: ↑Wed Apr 28, 2021 9:45 pm You can finagle it at the crank but it's not particularly easy... CCT undone and dowel out of chain guide, maybe slide front guide up too, almost need 3 hands. Want to make it easier, remove the bolt holding the ignition trigger wheel and the wheel (it is keyed to only go on one way). You'll have to torque that up later (I'd use loctite), engine in gear, rear brake applied maybe. 32 ft.lbs. Last one I did, I used this method.
Memory bad... I have fought at the top end too, tricky getting enough chain slack to move it a tooth on the cam sprockets without removing cam caps. Again, CCT undone, maybe dowel out of chain guide. May have to move crank a tad CW or CCW depending.
Bottom line, if all timing marks line up and CCT released, should be good... manually rotate engine CW to recheck....
With the crank at the timing mark, the cam sprockets have to go clockwise. I'll try it the easy way first. Sometimes a wrench with a dead-blow hammer is a decent substitute for an impact wrench...
I'm going to test that theory tonight with a very large glass of rum.
Except bears. Bears will kill you. Haha!Hppants wrote: ↑Thu Apr 29, 2021 5:53 pm I've BTDT, Ross.
I was so panic'd, I knew I mis-timed my buddy's bike and was afraid I couldn't put it back together. So we slept on it (like you did) and the next day (with HUGE help from Ray and Bob), it all came back together.
That which does not kill us makes us stronger, eh?
HotRodZilla wrote: ↑Thu Apr 29, 2021 8:11 pmExcept bears. Bears will kill you. Haha!Hppants wrote: ↑Thu Apr 29, 2021 5:53 pm I've BTDT, Ross.
I was so panic'd, I knew I mis-timed my buddy's bike and was afraid I couldn't put it back together. So we slept on it (like you did) and the next day (with HUGE help from Ray and Bob), it all came back together.
That which does not kill us makes us stronger, eh?
Solved, as far as I know. Seems to run OK in the garage but I was too tired to finish reassembly and was too tired to ride safely anyway. Crappy weather tomorrow so no test ride until the weekend.
Never had to re-time a motor before and it took a lot of mis-steps before I finally got it right (I think).
I should have said once off fast idle but you understood anyway. That was my second time doing a valve adjust. The first time went smoothly. That damn CCT engagement had me going for awhile as well.FJRoss wrote: ↑Thu Apr 29, 2021 10:11 pmNever had to re-time a motor before and it took a lot of mis-steps before I finally got it right (I think).
I did my first valve check on my own from "how to" posts. Same with the first time I had to do adjustments. I have done a few of each and this is the first time I ran into trouble. I THOUGHT I had it but the intake cam was a real bitch to get right. You think you have it and then everything moves when the CCT is engaged. Good thing I'm stubborn - makes up for inexperience (or maybe a lack of sufficient mechanical aptitude).
A good (if painful) learning experience. Most likely I won't have a slipped tooth the next time. But if it happens, it won't take me most of a day to put it right.