Hooligans
Well-Known Member
Fellow Vmax enthusiasts, a scenario/question I pose for you;
When setting the cams for valve clearance measurement I followed the Yamaha Manual procedure as follows;
Set T1 mark, make sure rear cams have timing marks pointing up and Cyl 1 is at TDC
Rotate 180 Degrees and Cyl 3 is at TDC
Set T2 mark, make sure front cam timing marks point up and Cyl 2 is at TDC
Rotate 180 degrees and Cyl 4 is at TDC
Am I misinterpreting the manual?
Some users on this forum have indicated to simply set the cams lobes up on the cylinder you are measuring, but the resulting measurements are vastly different than results from the aforementioned procedure.
In other words; in accordance with my interpretation of the shop manual my clearances are in check, but following user initiated advice my clearances are way off.
I should say that the reason for checking them is I switched my 89 cams with 96 cams (a long winded story for another post in another section of the forum). I should also say that compression is good across all four cylinders with little to no variance so I will leave well enough alone.
But for the purpose of knowing how to do it right, which method is correct?
I am positive my motor is timed properly because after much trial and error (and 2 new cam chains and 4 new camshafts) my timing marks are dead on. :bang head:
This aint my first rodeo when it comes to building engines but definitely my first V4.
Pray tell oh ye who knows,
"Reading furnishes the mind only with materials of knowledge; it is thinking that makes what we read ours."
- John Locke
hoo·li·gan noun \ˈhü-li-gən\
<H2>: a usually young man who does noisy and violent things as part of a group or gang
</H2>
When setting the cams for valve clearance measurement I followed the Yamaha Manual procedure as follows;
Set T1 mark, make sure rear cams have timing marks pointing up and Cyl 1 is at TDC
Rotate 180 Degrees and Cyl 3 is at TDC
Set T2 mark, make sure front cam timing marks point up and Cyl 2 is at TDC
Rotate 180 degrees and Cyl 4 is at TDC
Am I misinterpreting the manual?
Some users on this forum have indicated to simply set the cams lobes up on the cylinder you are measuring, but the resulting measurements are vastly different than results from the aforementioned procedure.
In other words; in accordance with my interpretation of the shop manual my clearances are in check, but following user initiated advice my clearances are way off.
I should say that the reason for checking them is I switched my 89 cams with 96 cams (a long winded story for another post in another section of the forum). I should also say that compression is good across all four cylinders with little to no variance so I will leave well enough alone.
But for the purpose of knowing how to do it right, which method is correct?
I am positive my motor is timed properly because after much trial and error (and 2 new cam chains and 4 new camshafts) my timing marks are dead on. :bang head:
This aint my first rodeo when it comes to building engines but definitely my first V4.
Pray tell oh ye who knows,
"Reading furnishes the mind only with materials of knowledge; it is thinking that makes what we read ours."
- John Locke
hoo·li·gan noun \ˈhü-li-gən\
<H2>: a usually young man who does noisy and violent things as part of a group or gang
</H2>