My 2 cents
A tip I got some years back may help a little with the slip issue on the original tensioner assembly. After tightening the lock screw a few times it can cut groves in the flat spot that the lock down comes in contact with. After this surface has several spots in it it has a tendency to first of all hang in a previous location not fully taking slack out of chain and second tightening down on a damaged hump not getting a full grip on the shaft. All this is intensified by someone not using a torque wrench and too much torque. Not having a tight chain it tends to have more vibration on an already weak piece of metal and can loosen up much easier.
The cure is take out the shaft and use a fine flat file to create a smooth surface in the flat spot for the lock down to tighten against. Also make sure and remove any ruff spots from the sides caused by the file so the shaft does not stick. The end of the screw should be checked also as some can have a bur that will tend to cut in and in rotation actually move the tensioner plunger out of adjustment. Remember if you remove too much metal then you create a weak spot which can cause the mechanism to flex and or bend and that can cause adjustment problems also.
I feel the best fix is the auto tensioner once you have a damaged original tensioner.
A tip I got some years back may help a little with the slip issue on the original tensioner assembly. After tightening the lock screw a few times it can cut groves in the flat spot that the lock down comes in contact with. After this surface has several spots in it it has a tendency to first of all hang in a previous location not fully taking slack out of chain and second tightening down on a damaged hump not getting a full grip on the shaft. All this is intensified by someone not using a torque wrench and too much torque. Not having a tight chain it tends to have more vibration on an already weak piece of metal and can loosen up much easier.
The cure is take out the shaft and use a fine flat file to create a smooth surface in the flat spot for the lock down to tighten against. Also make sure and remove any ruff spots from the sides caused by the file so the shaft does not stick. The end of the screw should be checked also as some can have a bur that will tend to cut in and in rotation actually move the tensioner plunger out of adjustment. Remember if you remove too much metal then you create a weak spot which can cause the mechanism to flex and or bend and that can cause adjustment problems also.
I feel the best fix is the auto tensioner once you have a damaged original tensioner.
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