I replaced the rings and cams, honed the cylinders and put a new base gasket, head gasket YICS O-rings and replaced the valve seals.
Yesterday I got the cams in place and then set up the chain to the sprockets. At first the chain did not move the cams. I didn't run the crank in a full revolution, only the 45 degrees it said in the manual to move the pointer to "C" and when the cams didn't follow I got help and discovered the chain was not on the sprocket.
Got it on and after turning the crank till the dots came back up I saw the dots were now just behind the arrows on both # 3 caps and both sprockets were off by a tooth though at first it looked like they were set properly. Moved the sprockets oriented one tooth so now the dots, arrows and TDC are in sync.
I oiled the cylinder walls (no oil in the engine at present) and rotated the engine by wrench to see if here were any obstacles to rotation and it turned easily enough but I could feel the friction from the newly honed walls.
Then I heard a clunk from the right side of the engine but didn't feel any restriction to rotation and I was going slowly so as to feel for anything like a valve hitting a piston, stopping rotation. I couldn't identify exactly where the noise came from and it wasn't at the same point in rotation. It almost sounds like it came from inside the case but I haven't opened the case. During the work I did I kept the holes covered and vacuumed the inside of the case with a vinyl tube attached to the vacuum cleaner to get out any particles of gasket or whatever that may have fallen in. The clunk is not reproducible in that I can't turn the engine over and hear the noise at the same time nor do I hear it on most revolutions.
I went ahead & checked the shims and came up with this:
Intake normal (.11~.15)
...gap....shim.....need shim
1 .20 ---285 --- 280
2 .12 ---275 --- 265
3 .13 ---290 --- 280
4 .19 ---290 --- 285
Exhaust normal (.21~.25)
...gap....shim.....need shim
1 .07 ---280 --- 275
2 .18 ---275 --- 280
3 .04 ---280 --- 270
4 .04 ---280 --- 270
Since the noise was not there at the moment I added a Tsb of oil to the cylinders and checked compression by using the starter and ran through 3-4 compression cycles each. When doing so I listened carefully for any clunk/noise and all sounded perfectly fine, just starter motor and the compressed gas coming out the spark plug holes/exhaust. Across all 4 cylinders though the compression was terrible, ranging from 60 to 80, nothing higher.
Because of that clunk and the low compression I have to wonder if somehow I bent valves before I got the chain properly in place and that caused the clunk I heard or is there something in the engine that with slow engine rotation would make noise when there is no oil in the engine? That it is irregular is curious.
If I did bend valves, how would I be able to tell this? All the buckets seem to be moving fluidly and I see no sign of binding.
Ideas?
Yesterday I got the cams in place and then set up the chain to the sprockets. At first the chain did not move the cams. I didn't run the crank in a full revolution, only the 45 degrees it said in the manual to move the pointer to "C" and when the cams didn't follow I got help and discovered the chain was not on the sprocket.
Got it on and after turning the crank till the dots came back up I saw the dots were now just behind the arrows on both # 3 caps and both sprockets were off by a tooth though at first it looked like they were set properly. Moved the sprockets oriented one tooth so now the dots, arrows and TDC are in sync.
I oiled the cylinder walls (no oil in the engine at present) and rotated the engine by wrench to see if here were any obstacles to rotation and it turned easily enough but I could feel the friction from the newly honed walls.
Then I heard a clunk from the right side of the engine but didn't feel any restriction to rotation and I was going slowly so as to feel for anything like a valve hitting a piston, stopping rotation. I couldn't identify exactly where the noise came from and it wasn't at the same point in rotation. It almost sounds like it came from inside the case but I haven't opened the case. During the work I did I kept the holes covered and vacuumed the inside of the case with a vinyl tube attached to the vacuum cleaner to get out any particles of gasket or whatever that may have fallen in. The clunk is not reproducible in that I can't turn the engine over and hear the noise at the same time nor do I hear it on most revolutions.
I went ahead & checked the shims and came up with this:
Intake normal (.11~.15)
...gap....shim.....need shim
1 .20 ---285 --- 280
2 .12 ---275 --- 265
3 .13 ---290 --- 280
4 .19 ---290 --- 285
Exhaust normal (.21~.25)
...gap....shim.....need shim
1 .07 ---280 --- 275
2 .18 ---275 --- 280
3 .04 ---280 --- 270
4 .04 ---280 --- 270
Since the noise was not there at the moment I added a Tsb of oil to the cylinders and checked compression by using the starter and ran through 3-4 compression cycles each. When doing so I listened carefully for any clunk/noise and all sounded perfectly fine, just starter motor and the compressed gas coming out the spark plug holes/exhaust. Across all 4 cylinders though the compression was terrible, ranging from 60 to 80, nothing higher.
Because of that clunk and the low compression I have to wonder if somehow I bent valves before I got the chain properly in place and that caused the clunk I heard or is there something in the engine that with slow engine rotation would make noise when there is no oil in the engine? That it is irregular is curious.
If I did bend valves, how would I be able to tell this? All the buckets seem to be moving fluidly and I see no sign of binding.
Ideas?
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