Daveed
15+ Year Contributor
- 231
- 0
- Feb 25, 2005
-
Olympia,
Washington
My exhaust cam gear has up/down movement (eccentric) and I have a bad feeling that if I continue driving it "as is" something bad will happen. A little background: rebuilt the motor and had a huge clacking noise...turns out it was the exhaust cam gear bolt not being tight and allowing the gear to wobble. Only drove about 10-20 miles before I found it.
Anyway, I tightened up the bolt and locktighted it but noticed that the hole in the cam gear is bigger than the bolt. Are they supposed to be this way? How does the cam gear get centered (which is apparently isn't yet) if the bolt hole is bigger than the bolt?
hmmm...maybe it got wallowed out
PS WHen my motor cools down this evening I'll go remove it and get measurements.
PSS Is there a locating ridge or something like that on the cam and the back of the pulley?
EDIT: YES, there is a locating ridge on the back of the pulley that goes over/around the end of the cam gear. My cam got a little wore down from the loose pulley. A new pulley helped a little but didn't fix the entire problem cause half the wear was on the pulley and the other half on the cam.

Anyway, I tightened up the bolt and locktighted it but noticed that the hole in the cam gear is bigger than the bolt. Are they supposed to be this way? How does the cam gear get centered (which is apparently isn't yet) if the bolt hole is bigger than the bolt?
hmmm...maybe it got wallowed out

PS WHen my motor cools down this evening I'll go remove it and get measurements.
PSS Is there a locating ridge or something like that on the cam and the back of the pulley?
EDIT: YES, there is a locating ridge on the back of the pulley that goes over/around the end of the cam gear. My cam got a little wore down from the loose pulley. A new pulley helped a little but didn't fix the entire problem cause half the wear was on the pulley and the other half on the cam.
. once you drew the bolt up tight the pin was just pressed up against the flat back side of the cam gear rather than in the hole correctly. the problem this causes is the camshaft can get out of time with the gear, hence the t-belt. then you can have devastating consequences. as stated before, the t-belt puts so much pressure on it and the locating dowel pin on the cam can't get lined up precisely with the cam gear.
Its straight too...found a thread where someone had a dowel pin that was bent
I may need to buy that gear from you if it shows a much smaller hole than the one on my car now