Cam Chain Tensioner Checks on a 900
#1
Posted 03 November 2007 - 09:47 pm
Cheers,
Chris.
2002 TDM900 in glorious yellow, NOW SOLD
2012 Honda Crosstourer VFR1200X. Hyperspeed tourer.
1990 XTZ750 in black, standard apart from Micron silencer. Mechanical restoration complete, cosmetic restoration next on the agenda.. NOW SOLD
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#2
Posted 03 November 2007 - 09:53 pm
http://www.carpe-tdm...mp;hl=cam chain
http://www.carpe-tdm...mp;hl=cam chain
http://www.carpe-tdm...mp;hl=cam chain
If you want to mark your location on the Carpe map: http://www.carpe-tdm...opic.php?t=5117
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Active member of TPLQHCSRSFC and TSRMCMAS (even though a year off) and avid fan of PM not sent.
#3
Posted 04 November 2007 - 12:05 pm
I'm going to fit it now and see what the deal is, hopefully I won't do a dandy 'cos I have to use it for work tomorrow
EDIT: Went well no problems, seems to be ok but the commute will tell the tale
The new design tensioner body (as opposed to the finger bit) is about twice as long as the old one. Once the tensioner is out you can see that the finger actually seems to press on another plate, which I suspect the chain runs over. When I took mine out I was careful to note any movement of the chain or the plate and thankfully it stayed put. New one in and Allen bolts tight, remove the locking plate, finger pops out and the jobs a carrot.
Edited by Radio_am, 04 November 2007 - 01:56 pm.
#4
Posted 04 November 2007 - 07:25 pm
Also, my bike has only done 12,000 miles, seems very low to be replacing the cam chain tensioner. What mileage is yours at Radio_am?
2002 TDM900 in glorious yellow, NOW SOLD
2012 Honda Crosstourer VFR1200X. Hyperspeed tourer.
1990 XTZ750 in black, standard apart from Micron silencer. Mechanical restoration complete, cosmetic restoration next on the agenda.. NOW SOLD
Follow me on twitter
#5
Posted 04 November 2007 - 08:42 pm
I don't think it's necessary to be at TDC but you could be unlucky I suppose. To be honest though, I think you'd have to be really unlucky for that to happen because there's 10 cam lobes so as one is coming on cam there's probably another just coming off cam and balancing it out.
From what I've gathered on Carpe, the early cam chain tensioners were badly designed and didn't put enough pressure on the chain making it slap. I don't think the mileage has much to do with it.
#6
Posted 04 November 2007 - 11:09 pm
If you did it otherwise radio you're one lucky SOB!
Even setting it on TDC wrong cylinder will have the inlet cam jump back 3 teeth - believe me I've done it.
Mine first rattled at around 15,000 miles. I still think Yamaha should be replacing them out of warranty - there's obviously a fault as they've changed the design as indicated by the -10 suffix number. It's a nonsense that a camchain tensioner only lasts 12,000 miles!
Edited by dandywarhol, 04 November 2007 - 11:11 pm.
1967 Yamaha TD1C 250, 2014 Kawasaki W800, 2011 Aprilia Tuono 1000 V4, 2020 Yamaha XSR900
"At the cutting edge of technophobia"
#7
Posted 05 November 2007 - 01:26 pm
However, I have a couple of questions to try and help me get my head around what I've gotten away with and one proviso of probably why I have gotten away with it.
I think I've gotten away with it because I've always done it on a cold bike, so it would just be the pressure of the buckets on the cams that would lead to any movement. Anyway, questions:
1: Why TDC on left only?
2: Why doesn't the chain jump a tooth when the cam chain is flapping about like a woman of the nights labia?
#8
Posted 05 November 2007 - 10:49 pm
2: The worn/fecked tensioner might let the chain slap but not enough movement to jump a tooth IMO. By the way, it's not necessarily wimmin of the nights labia which flap - wait til you see a prolapse.....
Edited by dandywarhol, 05 November 2007 - 11:35 pm.
1967 Yamaha TD1C 250, 2014 Kawasaki W800, 2011 Aprilia Tuono 1000 V4, 2020 Yamaha XSR900
"At the cutting edge of technophobia"
#9
Posted 05 November 2007 - 10:52 pm
2: Why doesn't the chain jump a tooth when the cam chain is flapping about like a woman of the nights labia?
1: If you can manage to position both cylinders at TDC at the same time, a jumpy cam-chain will be the last thing to worry about Iirc there is the least pressure on the cams in this position. I suspect on the older 360 degrees TDM it may make no difference whether you use left or right TDC but I've drunk too much wine to be sure about that.
2: The tensioner pushes against the chain-guide at the far side of the guide's rotation point. So when you remove the tensioner altogether you suddenly get a whole lot of additional slack in the chain, even compared to when the tensioner wouldn't lock itself correctly. What happens then is that the chain drops (almost) entirely from the teeth of its bottom drive and is at the mercy of the slightest movement caused by the valve-springs pressure.
You could be lucky, and you can of course manually turn the engine a few time afterwards to see if it rotates without locking but as I found out myself an engine can jump a few teeth and still seemingly run fine. It's like playing Russian roulette
#10
Posted 06 November 2007 - 12:59 pm
Robelst, if it was a 360 degree crank I suspect both pistons would be at TDC I think you might mean 180 crank, all that wine must be making you see double degrees
Dandy.. I was just about to have dinner but I might leave it for a while. Thanks
#12
Posted 06 November 2007 - 07:49 pm
1. Seat, side panels & fuel tank off.
2. Remove the cylinder identification sensor.
3. Remove generator cover on LHS, or can I just remove the two inspection plugs to get at the centre nut and the timing mark?.
4. Remove spark plugs.
5. Turn engine (via nut at centre of generator which I guess must be direct on to crank?).
6. Put little finger down hole where cylinder identification sensor was onto the camshaft, turn crank anticlockwise until I feel a raised part on the exhaust cam approaching (this raised part looks like it has a square profile on the parts diagram, right at the end of the camshaft?).
7. Then turn the crank 1 FULL TURN anticlockwise from there and that's the left cylinder firing.
8. Do I still need to align the “T” mark on the generator rotor?
9. Swap the cam chain tensioner and gasket.
10. Start her up and check it.
11. Go to pub, drink real ale and feel smug.
I’ll take some pictures (cos I know we all lurve piccies) and do something for the knowledge base.
Thanks again,
Chris.
2002 TDM900 in glorious yellow, NOW SOLD
2012 Honda Crosstourer VFR1200X. Hyperspeed tourer.
1990 XTZ750 in black, standard apart from Micron silencer. Mechanical restoration complete, cosmetic restoration next on the agenda.. NOW SOLD
Follow me on twitter
#13
Posted 07 November 2007 - 12:40 am
Removed 2 plugs from generator cover
Turned engine anticlockwise by the centre nut
Felt the compression as I turned it and the compression stopped just when the "T" mark aligned.
Rechecked by turning another 2 turns anticlock - compression is only felt before "T" when the left cylinder is on compression. If no compression is felt then you've got the left cylinder at The end of exhaust/beginning of induction -DO NOT REMOVE THE TENSIONER IN THIS POSITION
Removed and replaced the tensioner and refitted the 2 cover plugs.
Job done
1967 Yamaha TD1C 250, 2014 Kawasaki W800, 2011 Aprilia Tuono 1000 V4, 2020 Yamaha XSR900
"At the cutting edge of technophobia"
#14
Posted 07 November 2007 - 01:55 pm
Robelst, if it was a 360 degree crank I suspect both pistons would be at TDC I think you might mean 180 crank, all that wine must be making you see double degrees
Dandy.. I was just about to have dinner but I might leave it for a while. Thanks
Can anyone tell me?
Were both cylinders running with the same crank timing? Surely not?
Edited by Radio_am, 07 November 2007 - 02:24 pm.
#15
Posted 07 November 2007 - 08:49 pm
Were both cylinders running with the same crank timing? Surely not?
What Robelst meant by 360 was the number of degrees the crank rotates between each cylinder firing. A 180 degree crank is used in a 4 cylinder engine (or a 2-stroke).
#16
Posted 08 November 2007 - 12:02 pm
1992 Mk1, 76k miles, Hagon springs, MTC exhaust, 4½ gears Gone now
2009 900 abs, 42k miles, Yamaha heated grips, double bubble screen, R&G crash bungs, scottoiler, Autocom, 1500 lumen LED spotlights.
#18
Posted 26 November 2007 - 09:16 pm
I'm going to fit it now and see what the deal is, hopefully I won't do a dandy 'cos I have to use it for work tomorrow
EDIT: Went well no problems, seems to be ok but the commute will tell the tale
The new design tensioner body (as opposed to the finger bit) is about twice as long as the old one. Once the tensioner is out you can see that the finger actually seems to press on another plate, which I suspect the chain runs over. When I took mine out I was careful to note any movement of the chain or the plate and thankfully it stayed put. New one in and Allen bolts tight, remove the locking plate, finger pops out and the jobs a carrot.
My new Cam Chain Tensioner turned up today - been waiting a bit for it - Fowlers said it was out of stock and had to come from Yamaha. Anyway, I've attached a couple of pics showing the exterior end of the tensioner. Am I right in thinking that once installed, I pull out the 'locking plate' with pliers and fit the end screw & washer? Job then becomes orange & pointy.
I'll do the job at the weekend and try & remember to take some pictures.
2002 TDM900 in glorious yellow, NOW SOLD
2012 Honda Crosstourer VFR1200X. Hyperspeed tourer.
1990 XTZ750 in black, standard apart from Micron silencer. Mechanical restoration complete, cosmetic restoration next on the agenda.. NOW SOLD
Follow me on twitter
#20
Posted 27 November 2007 - 12:08 pm
Ta
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