Stahlgrau333
Forum Mentor
From what I can tell, based on what others have posted (I don't have a manual myself), you're a tooth off. Loosen the tensioner, raise the chain just off either the intake or exhaust cam, and either rotate your exhaust cam counter-clockwise (as it shows in the pic), or your intake cam clockwise (again, from the pic perspective) until the chain fits over the very next tooth in sequence on the cam gear.
The way you'll know for sure which one to adjust will be by the crank mark. If you've got your crank aligned, the cam you just moved should be OBVIOUSLY misaligned. If you've got it right, you should be able to get them where they are both pointed in relatively the same direction.
I can't tell from the pics where your crank is lining up, so I can't give you any suggestions based on that...but, based on the direction the engine spins and the orientation of the cam chain tensioner, I would be willing to bed it's your exhaust cam. At least, that's where I'd start.
What you've described (the loss of pressure across all cylinders, the single 'clunk' sound) is textbook cam timing.
The way you'll know for sure which one to adjust will be by the crank mark. If you've got your crank aligned, the cam you just moved should be OBVIOUSLY misaligned. If you've got it right, you should be able to get them where they are both pointed in relatively the same direction.
I can't tell from the pics where your crank is lining up, so I can't give you any suggestions based on that...but, based on the direction the engine spins and the orientation of the cam chain tensioner, I would be willing to bed it's your exhaust cam. At least, that's where I'd start.
What you've described (the loss of pressure across all cylinders, the single 'clunk' sound) is textbook cam timing.
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