I had a little time today and figured I might as well adjust the valves on my 99. It has almost 90K miles on it now and had never been done. What I found is not what I expected and I am a bit confused.
The intake valves were loose (as in a lot of lash), two cylinders over tolerance and 4 very near the high end. The exhuast valves were all in tolerance, but were at the high end too. The spec for the adjustment is really wide for both too, a lot bigger tolerance than I have seen in the past.
In the past I have seen the lash get smaller as the valves pound up into the seats wearing the valves and the seats, on neglected engines to the point that there is no lash at all. The only other times I have seen the lash too large is a bad adjustment or serious cam/lifter wear. I am confident that the cam and lifters in my engine are in good shape as the oil analysis has been good so far. The kind of wear that would have to take place to get the lash that I had would be major. The only reason I see for the state of my valves is that Cummins builds them with a ton of lash initially to compensate for the wear on the seats and valves over 150K miles before the first scheduled adjustment. Any opinions on this?
After action report is that the truck does run better. Low end torque definately improved, boost and EGT come up faster with EGT leveling off sooner, and overall throttle response is a lot better. Smoke at WOT is less as well. The engine is a tad quieter now, I heard the rockers ticking some time ago and that is why I did the adjustment to begin with. I am glad I made the adjustments. I expect fuel economy to come up slightly as well, but time will tell on that.
Time from start to finish was just under 40 minutes, piece of cake really.
EDIT: I adjusted to the low third of tolerance on all valves, a bit tight of middle.
Any opinions comments or questions?
The intake valves were loose (as in a lot of lash), two cylinders over tolerance and 4 very near the high end. The exhuast valves were all in tolerance, but were at the high end too. The spec for the adjustment is really wide for both too, a lot bigger tolerance than I have seen in the past.
In the past I have seen the lash get smaller as the valves pound up into the seats wearing the valves and the seats, on neglected engines to the point that there is no lash at all. The only other times I have seen the lash too large is a bad adjustment or serious cam/lifter wear. I am confident that the cam and lifters in my engine are in good shape as the oil analysis has been good so far. The kind of wear that would have to take place to get the lash that I had would be major. The only reason I see for the state of my valves is that Cummins builds them with a ton of lash initially to compensate for the wear on the seats and valves over 150K miles before the first scheduled adjustment. Any opinions on this?
After action report is that the truck does run better. Low end torque definately improved, boost and EGT come up faster with EGT leveling off sooner, and overall throttle response is a lot better. Smoke at WOT is less as well. The engine is a tad quieter now, I heard the rockers ticking some time ago and that is why I did the adjustment to begin with. I am glad I made the adjustments. I expect fuel economy to come up slightly as well, but time will tell on that.
Time from start to finish was just under 40 minutes, piece of cake really.
EDIT: I adjusted to the low third of tolerance on all valves, a bit tight of middle.
Any opinions comments or questions?