geordi wrote:
Do you think it is safe to try and rotate the crank with the cams pinned and the rockers in place? It seems to me that you might risk impacting the valves, even turning by hand, b/c some of the valves might be open with the cam pinned. I could be wrong about this, but that is just the first thought that comes to mind. I wouldn't want you to eat more rockers after all the wrenching I'm sure you have done.
NO! This, from page 9-200 of the [2005] service manual (CAMSHAFT):
"CAUTION: Before removing the cylinder head cover/
intake manifold or timing belt the engine must
rotated to the 90° ATDC, or the 3 O’clock position.
Failure to do so could result in valve and/or piston
damage during reassembly. (Refer to 9 - ENGINE/
VALVE TIMING - STANDARD PROCEDURE)"
geordi wrote:
What about just pinning the crank in the right spot, pulling the belt and manually rotating each CAM, exactly 180* clockwise from where it is? Yes, I know that the pins won't go in, but then you reinstall the belt, flip the crank 360* and check the pins again. If you scribe the existing teeth pointing at each other on the cams, they should match if / when the pins go back in. I'm guessing here, I hope I never need to figure this out. This might be why I got about 40 rockers in my box of parts from the engine replacement.
I believe the way you get two crank rotations for one cam rotation is the gear ratio between the crankshaft (# teeth / dia) and the camshafts teeth/dia. There are twice as many teeth on the cam gears as the crank (someone count them, mine's buttoned up), so a complete crank revolution only turns the cam gears 180-degrees. This results in ONE intake valve opening for every TWO crank rotations, and ONE exhaust valve opening about 180 out of phase with the intake - also for each two crank revolutions.
The PINS, if correctly installed, are supposed to lock the crank and cam at exactly 90-degrees of the 720-degree (4-stroke) combustion cycle.
IF you rotate the cams with the crank NOT AT 90-ATDC and the cams attempt to push open the valves - you will damage something.
Mark