HBrunton said:SLOWLY roll the engine over by hand until you feel it stop. Make a mark on your balancer. Now rotate the engine opposite of the way you turned it all the way until it stops. QUOTE]
Sorry, if I am not understanding, but roll the engine over until "what" stops? The rocker arm?
JGheen said:I think I am stillor not reading your post right. But if the exhaust valve is always open by adjusting it to stay open how does the piston ever get to TDC? It would be stopped early by the exhaust valve hitting it. So then if you turned it back the other way you would be going back to BDC and the exhaust valve would close back up. I don't know, please explain better and forgive my misunderstanding.
JGheen said:So then if you turned it back the other way you would be going back to BDC and the exhaust valve would close back up.
SEmerson said:it stops before tdc. Then when you go the other way it again stops just before tdc. Then you mark in the middle of the 2 stop points.
Does any one have any help for my problem?
Vaughn MacKenzie said:JGheen read back a couple posts. . . the exhaust valve is open for the whole engine rotation because it is way overtightened to force it open. Note: don't rotate engine past the point where it normally would open the valve because then you can cause valve spring bind/damage. In this case rotate engine 1 revolution then tighten the valve and do the procedure.
I never heard of this procedure before but it should work very well. BTW I have my head off right now doing the headgasket. . . do you think now would be a good time to mark TDC??
Vaughn