Albert Donaldson Posted January 25, 2016 Share Posted January 25, 2016 Good afternoon,I'm presently in the final stages of putting together a new k-series engine and am looking for a little bit of guidance when putting the head and bottom end together for the first time.As I see it I have two options:1)(preferred) set the cam timing on the head on the bench, assemble to bottom end with pistons at mid stroke, bring piston 1 up to TDC gently, check for valve piston contact if all ok fit timing belt and check cam timing again2)Set the cams at safe position with old non vernier timing pulleys set pistons at 90 deg BTDC fit timing belt, bring no.1 up to TDC then swap the timing pulleys for the verniers and set cam timing.I'm fitting 1444 cams with omega pistons and have the feeling that there may be no safe position as in option 2.The other question I have is with regard to the engine management. I'm running an emerald with wasted spark and batched injection-presumably this means it is not possible to get the timing 360 deg out as fuel and spark are available whether on the compression stroke or exhaust stroke ie ultimately the opening and closing of the valves are determining whether a power stroke occurs or not? I had a bad experience in my youth with a ford transit where I managed to do exactly this and hole a piston- I don't want to repeat.Sanity check appreciated. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
oilyhands Posted January 25, 2016 Share Posted January 25, 2016 This is the method I use for initial cam timing. It is safe and reliable.Transfer the timing marks from the original pulleys to the verniers as per my web page.Set the engine at 90BTDC on number one.Fit the head. Attached the cam pulleys, if the valves are oversized them make sure you turn the pulleys when attached in unison and synchronised as the valves can touch one another.Align the pulleys at their 90BTDC position as per my web page/K engine page.Attach the belt and tension it.retard the inlet pulley 10 degreesadvance the exhaust pulley 10 degrees.then it will be safe to turn to TDC to measure valve lift.with wasted spark and a crank sensor you can't go wrong. Oily Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Albert Donaldson Posted January 26, 2016 Author Share Posted January 26, 2016 Thanks Oily, all done now and in good shape.... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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