The Third Part - Not boring! Or How many Dennises are there?
While I waited for those parts to come, I sanded down the shims I had for my intake valves which were too tight. It wasn’t fun but I think I got them all pretty good. I was also able to swap valve shims around to get the expected gap much closer. Then I talked to Dennis Shaw, my machinist. I should mention that he is a successful race engine builder (he used to build the motors for Team Highball, the Mazda factory IMSA team back in the ‘70s and ‘80s which won the 24 Hours of Daytona four times in a row.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MuSvVK6n1V8). He figured he could do something with either the bore or the follower. If he’s going to be machining on the cam carrier, I might as well take the cams out since that would require a proper cleaning job and I didn’t need to pay him for taking the cams out if I could do that myself. Does it sound like adjusting valves has turned into a fur ball yet?
According to the manual, in order to take the cams out of the carrier, you have to take the pulleys off first. I pulled the pulley off the exhaust cam. I saw the keyway in the pulley and the key slot in the cam but I didn’t see a key! In fact, they used a lot of RTV silicon to make sure the oil wouldn’t leak out the front and there was RTV in the key slot in the cam. Now I’m scared! Without some positive way of setting the position of the pulley, I didn’t know how to get the cam timing back where it was! The cam timing spec was specified in terms of the position of full lift – 102° ATDC. Well, with the engine and tranny in the car (and not a convenient way of fixing a degree wheel on the crank, I wasn’t sure I could tell where 102° ATDC was. I thought my only hope was if Dave marked the flywheel for that when he built the motor. That seemed possible but not likely. At this point, I sure as hell didn’t want to take the pulley off the intake cam! I figured I was in enough trouble already! As it turned out, you can take the cams out of the carrier with the pulleys on them. I sure wish I had known that!
In the next day or so, I received the order from Burton Power. I got the shims I wanted so I tried the follower I ordered in the bore and it was too big too! Now, it should be said that oversized followers are available so that if your bore was trashed you could rebore it bigger and use the bigger follower. That’s not what I had. The original bore was 1.200” and the oversized followers are 1.250”. The new ones I had were only several thousandths bigger than 1.200”. I figured that Dennis should be able to enlarge the bore a little for one of my new followers. All this for a valve adjustment?!
I met Dennis a day or so later. I felt confident that he’d be able to do something about the follower and bore and I was hopeful that he’d be able to come up with some way of making sure my cam timing was good. I was a little heartened when talked with him on the phone and he said when he changes the cam timing on motors he builds, he starts with a 4° change since 2° probably wouldn’t make a difference. So if he could help me get in the ballpark, that would be good enough. Maybe using a key would put the cam in that 2° window…
He first worked on the follower bore. After talking about it and measuring things he decided it didn’t make any sense to try to cut a few thousandths from the bore with his mill so he worked on it with a ScotchBrite buffer on an air grinder and a brake cylinder hone on a drill. He got it close and then polished the follower with his crank journal polisher. (A fun fact is that his crank journal polishers are like a big band sander but the abrasive is actually cork!) After a while he got it to feel really nice.
Then, on to degreeing the cams. I told him that at TDC, the cam lobs were essentially 180° opposed to each other. He didn’t believe me. Well, I couldn’t explain it. All I could do was tell him that that’s the way it was and the TC motor was alike in that way. We tried to think of some way of degreeing the cam without taking the tranny off. He noticed that there was a stain (probably caused by the RTV in the key slot of the cam) on the inside of the pulley bore that likely indicated where the key slot on the cam had been. Given the diameter of the bore in the pulley there and the thickness of the stain, we calculated that it was not just a couple of degrees different from using a key but eight or ten degrees different so just putting a key in the cam and mating the pulley to the cam was not going to work. At this point, it was looking like unless Dave marked the cam timing degree (102° ATDC) on the flywheel, I would have to take the tranny out of the car and mark it myself. Marking the flywheel wouldn’t be that difficult (measure the circumference of the flywheel, divide by 360 multiply by 102 and measure that distance from TDC and Bob’s your uncle!) but while I’ve taken the tranny out several times, it is a huge pain! When you’re up to your ass in alligators, it’s difficult to remember that the initial objective was to drain the swamp! It seemed like there was a new alligator every time I turned around!
While I was trying to figure out my next move, Dennis was looking at my cam and cam carrier. He had suggested there should be some witness marks on the cam and carrier from the build but so far we hadn’t seen them. Then he saw them! There was a scribe mark on the cam that lined up with a scribe mark on inside of the cam carrier. [cam TDC scribe mark.jpg] There are painted marks on the front and back of the pulleys for external reference to TDC and when those scribe marks were lined up on the intake cam (which still had its pulley), that pulley was oriented to TDC (as noted by the paint marks). Also the lobes of the cam were about 180° degrees opposed to each other as I remembered! The mystery was solved! Finally things are starting to work out!
I’m working on documentation for my car and made a note to include a mention of those witness marks in it. When I got home, I looked at what I had already put in my document:
“Cam timing
From front, the yellow lines (on the pulleys) should fall onto the line formed by the cam axes at TDC. From the rear, the yellow lines (on the pulleys) align with the cam box top surface on the outside. Inside, there are scribe lines on rear of #1 cam bearing (top) and corresponding marks on cams. All at TDC.”That was a quote from the letter Dave Bean sent me with the motor. I guess I could have saved myself a lot of worrying if I had thought to read my own documentation but what fun would that have been? So now, I just need to clean up the cam carrier really well and assemble it on the motor.