Forum › Forums › Tractor Operation And Maintenance › valve adjustment
- This topic has 12 replies, 7 voices, and was last updated 11 years, 9 months ago by dogdoc.
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January 15, 2013 at 6:49 pm #30721
Before I pulled the valve assembly I wanted to check/practice valve adjustment on my y385 engine.
just to confirm, cyl 1 near radiator, 3 near firewall
valves front to back e/i, e/i e/i, and firing order 1-3-2
rotated crank pulley until intake valve of 1 is closing and timing mark on pulley is coming to tdc pointer (compression stroke of #1). When pulley timing mark is at tdc pointer, intake of #1 is still closing. #1 does not fully close until pulley timing mark is at about 1:30. At which point there is almost zero gap measured for the intake valve of #1. Rotated the crank pulley 240 deg and checked #3 same thing no gap, 240 deg checked #2 same thing no gap.
Should i just set the crank pulley to tdc of the compression stroke of #1 and set the valve lash of #1, rotate 240 deg and set #3, rotate 240deg and set #2
Thanks
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January 15, 2013 at 7:44 pm #35663
I pasted above an image of the four-cycle engine from Wikipedia because it helps me think about it. The four cycles are 1)intake, 2)compression, 3)power and 4) exhaust. The piston is at TDC twice — between exhaust and intake, and between compression and power. The intake valve opens for the intake stroke, and the exhaust valve opens for the exhaust stroke. You want to adjust the valves when they are both closed. Both valves are closed for the compression and power strokes. You want to adjust them at TDC between compression and power.
In two revolutions of the crankshaft each cylinder fires once, so with a 3-cylinder you get 3 fires per 720 degrees, or a fire every 240 degrees. So once you find the right TDC on one cylinder turning the crankshaft 240 degrees gets you to the right TDC for the next-firing one.
Please make sure you have fastened the kill switch so there is no possibility of the engine starting while you turn it by hand.
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January 15, 2013 at 9:35 pm #35664
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January 15, 2013 at 10:34 pm #35665
Don't look at the pulley, when both valves are closed set the valves on that cylinder. Then rotate the crank and do the same on the cylinder with the closed valves. Rotate the crank and do the last cylinder. If the valves are closed the piston is at or near TDC no matter what the pulley mark says unless someone tore the engine down and failed to correctly time the cam.
You haven't torn the engine down have you? Was the engine running before you started doing the overhead? Are you sure your turning the crank in the correct direction?
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January 16, 2013 at 7:56 am #35666
i am definitely turning clockwise and the tractor ran fine before i started.
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January 16, 2013 at 8:57 am #35667
does anyone know if the glow plug hole is lined up vertically over the piston? if so i might rig up a depth gauge to verify my tdc mark for cylinder #1
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January 16, 2013 at 2:05 pm #35672
I believe the glow plug goes into the precombustion chamber from which there is no direct entry to the piston.
For many years the way I have set the valves on engines is by rotating the crank until both valves are closed on a cylinder and then setting the clearance. This never has failed to do the job.
It's been years since I set the overhead on my tractor but as best I remember I ran into the same issue you have, the pointer didn't line up with TDC when the valves were closed. When I realized that I just used my tried and true method of setting the valves and it worked.
Thinking about it now, I remember spending several hours trying to figure out why TDC didn't end up with the valves being closed and finally gave up.
If the both valves are closed on a cylinder then the cam is on the low side of the lift and the clearance can be set then. It's not rocket science, just do it.
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January 16, 2013 at 5:50 pm #35674
You don't need to be that precise. If you look at the picture I posted, both valves are closed for the whole compression stroke and power stroke. It's not like they're “more” closed at TDC than the rest of the stroke, the idea is that at TDC you're as far away from either valve opening as can be and there's no chance that one is slightly open when you're doing the adjustment. Being off by 20 degrees is no problem.
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January 16, 2013 at 8:26 pm #35678
upon further inspection what i thought was the tdc mark on the crank pulley, a line on the face of the pulley is really 180 deg from tdc. when i openned the flywheel inspection port we found the marks on the flywheel to verify tdc and low and behold there were marks on the edge of the crank pulley lined up with the pointer on the block as well. dont know how we missed the edge marks on the pulley the first time around. lash on the valves was pretty good, torque on the head bolts was not. they all moved a little before the wrench broke at 100#. i did not back them off first, just tightened.
could someone explain to me how the injector pump times the fuel injection on these tractors, curious about that.
thanks
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January 16, 2013 at 8:40 pm #35679
it is all gear to gear in the front of the engine there is posts and pictures on the site showing how things are timed and marked on the gears
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January 17, 2013 at 12:42 am #35680
And whatever you do, Don't screw with the injector timing!
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January 17, 2013 at 12:55 am #35681
dogdoc,
It is important to break loose those bolts before re-torquing.
Over time, heat, paint, etc will 'freeze' the bolt heads (and to different degrees). To be sure that they are all torqued correctly and equally, they should each be broken loose and retorqued. Do them one at a time so you don't disturb the head gasket.
RonJ
ronjin
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January 17, 2013 at 9:33 am #35682
you are right carl, sound advice i will try to follow it
did not mess with the fuel injector timing, just curious. if it is as i have read about 14-18 deg before tdc then seems important that both valves are closed just before or at tdc. which was part of the reason i was so neurotic about being sure #1 was a tdc when adjusting valves
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