After a rash of suspected jumped timing cases I decided to check up on my own responses by checking the cam timing on my cars. Turns out that my suggestions (from the manual) aren't worth a pint of pee when tried on an actual car.
With the top cover removed it's easy to line up the 12 and 3 marks. None of my three cars have the top cover installed. I did chop the part that wraps around the idler wheel on one cover for ease of removal but haven't employed it yet.
The problem is lining up the crank. There's a notch in the flange behind the sprocket but I cannot see it on my EFI car because of the VAF. There's also a notch on the pulley that lines up with the T on the scale. The notch is tiny and is hidden by the scale because of the sight angle. There is a keyway that can be felt but hard to know if it's at 12 o'clock.
What I did was remove the pulley, file the notch bigger and paint it with Wite-out. Because I still cannot see it I also made a white mark on the pulley OPPOSITE the keyway so it points directly down. Even though there's nothing to line it up with, due to the 2:1 ratio and the crank pulley being larger than the cam gear, it would be noticably off if it slipped a tooth.
There are two marks on the scale on an EFI car: The T mark (cam) and 10 degrees (ign). I seriously don't know how a timing light could see that thing. I might weld a tab to the notch next time.
With the top cover removed it's easy to line up the 12 and 3 marks. None of my three cars have the top cover installed. I did chop the part that wraps around the idler wheel on one cover for ease of removal but haven't employed it yet.
The problem is lining up the crank. There's a notch in the flange behind the sprocket but I cannot see it on my EFI car because of the VAF. There's also a notch on the pulley that lines up with the T on the scale. The notch is tiny and is hidden by the scale because of the sight angle. There is a keyway that can be felt but hard to know if it's at 12 o'clock.
What I did was remove the pulley, file the notch bigger and paint it with Wite-out. Because I still cannot see it I also made a white mark on the pulley OPPOSITE the keyway so it points directly down. Even though there's nothing to line it up with, due to the 2:1 ratio and the crank pulley being larger than the cam gear, it would be noticably off if it slipped a tooth.
There are two marks on the scale on an EFI car: The T mark (cam) and 10 degrees (ign). I seriously don't know how a timing light could see that thing. I might weld a tab to the notch next time.
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