So, I was looking at my cam sprockets , well a spare set, today and trying to figure out how to machine a slot in them with out an indexing table.
Thats when I noticed if you flip one over, the teeth are staggered when the mounting holes line up.
As you can see, they don't split exactly in the middle. There are 34 teeth, for 10.5 degrees between teeth. That is 21 degrees advance. measured at the crank. Now the teeth don't split directly in the middle, so I am guessing by flipping the sprocket, it comes in at about 5 or 6 degrees of cam advance. I am not sure exactly, but the alignment holes both liked up exactly on my cams, when one was put in alignment. With the sprocket reversed, the mark is advanced probably .045 or so.
I did grind the front side of the sprockets flat, since there are bosses around the bolt holes, and I wanted the sprockets flat against the cam flange. I also stamped "front" on them for future reference. Also I only did the intake, since that seemed to be the one everyone did when I searched on the subject.
Ok, engine gurus, what do you think?
Thats when I noticed if you flip one over, the teeth are staggered when the mounting holes line up.
As you can see, they don't split exactly in the middle. There are 34 teeth, for 10.5 degrees between teeth. That is 21 degrees advance. measured at the crank. Now the teeth don't split directly in the middle, so I am guessing by flipping the sprocket, it comes in at about 5 or 6 degrees of cam advance. I am not sure exactly, but the alignment holes both liked up exactly on my cams, when one was put in alignment. With the sprocket reversed, the mark is advanced probably .045 or so.
I did grind the front side of the sprockets flat, since there are bosses around the bolt holes, and I wanted the sprockets flat against the cam flange. I also stamped "front" on them for future reference. Also I only did the intake, since that seemed to be the one everyone did when I searched on the subject.
Ok, engine gurus, what do you think?
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