It shouldn't take any strength at all.. unless you try to turn the crank backwards. All you're doing is taking the slack out of a hanging chain and pushing up to the teeth on the crank sprocket. Maybe a few ounces of pressure? If there's a loop in the chain at the bottom of the crank, you can't get it by just doing this method. This is the problem I had before with Bohn Frazers bike. No matter what I did, it kept jumping a tooth on the crank. Your crank is pulling the chain down the back side of the motor and should be pulling it fairly tight to pull the cams.
Here's a really crude pic of what may have happened in your case, and what I think happened to me on Bohn's bike. The first pic is the cam chain with the adjuster out and the chain hanging at the front of the motor.
On the next pic, what could happen is you push in on the adjuster bar, and it pushes the chain against the crank sprocket on the bottom to where it grabs teeth, but there's still a loop on the bottom.
So then you have just one or two crank sprocket teeth trying to pull the chain and the cams along as you turn the crank clockwise.. which isn't enough links for it to grab.. and it jumps a tooth. You can solve this problem by having the valve cover off and advancing the exhaust cam. This pulls the slack up.. instead of just pushing it in. Then when you put your adjuster back in it pulls the slack from between the two cams..and pulls your ex cam back to the right spot... instead of pushing the slack between the ex cam and the crank.
Tod
Here's a really crude pic of what may have happened in your case, and what I think happened to me on Bohn's bike. The first pic is the cam chain with the adjuster out and the chain hanging at the front of the motor.
On the next pic, what could happen is you push in on the adjuster bar, and it pushes the chain against the crank sprocket on the bottom to where it grabs teeth, but there's still a loop on the bottom.
So then you have just one or two crank sprocket teeth trying to pull the chain and the cams along as you turn the crank clockwise.. which isn't enough links for it to grab.. and it jumps a tooth. You can solve this problem by having the valve cover off and advancing the exhaust cam. This pulls the slack up.. instead of just pushing it in. Then when you put your adjuster back in it pulls the slack from between the two cams..and pulls your ex cam back to the right spot... instead of pushing the slack between the ex cam and the crank.
Tod
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