Hello all,
I have been working on a 78 Standard for most of last year. Once it was running it seemed to get richer as it warmed up. I have gone through the carbs several times and finally decided to pull the valve cover and see how the clearances were. All were either tight or very tight.
I know that there has been a lot of advice on valve shim changing but I would like to share my slight modifications and also a question for the group.
The shim tool has several forums written on how it doesn’t align up with the bolt holes. I agree and instead of widening out the holes I used vise grip pliers to hold the tool. I must say that this allows for a quick hold down without trying to get the bolt to line up. I still had a hard time getting the shims out of some buckets. The shims would become loose but there didn’t seem to be enough head / wiggle room. I figured that the tool wasn’t holding the bucket down far enough. So, I ground the bottom of the tool that seats against the head. This seemed to push the bucket down just a little bit further and the shims then came out with a problem. I am going to try and attach pictures, (my first time so hopefully you can see my pictures.)
http://s1339.beta.photobucket.com/us...52562957547186
Now for my issue/question. I have read a lot of advise you guys have written and I haven’t seen anything about not turning the motor over without shims in the buckets. I read that you measure gap, remove shim and replace with the correct size. Most forums say to take the shims to the local bike shops and that they will swap them out. Based on this I measured gaps and then took out all of the shims. When most of the shims were out and I was rotating the motor I heard a “Snap”. I know that didn’t sound right but didn’t see anything at that time. I did not bump the tool with the cam! The motor would rotate with no apparent issue. I was able to reuse four of the shims in other spots and the local shop swapped out 2 more. I had to order 2 on line.
As I was putting shims back into the buckets I noticed that the cams had grinding on the edges and shards of material on top of the buckets. I now think that the buckets rode up higher without the shims in and the cams bumped the edges.
I blew out the buckets and replaced the corrected shims in and am buttoning it all up but haven’t cranked it yet. Do you think that the buckets are damaged too much? Has anyone else done this before?
Thanks, Bartman
I have been working on a 78 Standard for most of last year. Once it was running it seemed to get richer as it warmed up. I have gone through the carbs several times and finally decided to pull the valve cover and see how the clearances were. All were either tight or very tight.
I know that there has been a lot of advice on valve shim changing but I would like to share my slight modifications and also a question for the group.
The shim tool has several forums written on how it doesn’t align up with the bolt holes. I agree and instead of widening out the holes I used vise grip pliers to hold the tool. I must say that this allows for a quick hold down without trying to get the bolt to line up. I still had a hard time getting the shims out of some buckets. The shims would become loose but there didn’t seem to be enough head / wiggle room. I figured that the tool wasn’t holding the bucket down far enough. So, I ground the bottom of the tool that seats against the head. This seemed to push the bucket down just a little bit further and the shims then came out with a problem. I am going to try and attach pictures, (my first time so hopefully you can see my pictures.)
http://s1339.beta.photobucket.com/us...52562957547186
Now for my issue/question. I have read a lot of advise you guys have written and I haven’t seen anything about not turning the motor over without shims in the buckets. I read that you measure gap, remove shim and replace with the correct size. Most forums say to take the shims to the local bike shops and that they will swap them out. Based on this I measured gaps and then took out all of the shims. When most of the shims were out and I was rotating the motor I heard a “Snap”. I know that didn’t sound right but didn’t see anything at that time. I did not bump the tool with the cam! The motor would rotate with no apparent issue. I was able to reuse four of the shims in other spots and the local shop swapped out 2 more. I had to order 2 on line.
As I was putting shims back into the buckets I noticed that the cams had grinding on the edges and shards of material on top of the buckets. I now think that the buckets rode up higher without the shims in and the cams bumped the edges.
I blew out the buckets and replaced the corrected shims in and am buttoning it all up but haven’t cranked it yet. Do you think that the buckets are damaged too much? Has anyone else done this before?
Thanks, Bartman
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