In measuring valve clearances, I did as you guys say. #1 exhaust parallel to the head, pointing forward which also puts #2 exhaust pointing up. Measure both in that position. Similar positions for measuring the others, doing 2 at a time.
If I measure exhaust #1 pointing up, the gap is looser. The same is true for the others that are measured from parallel.
I'm wondering if this method is just for convenience and close enough, or is there something related to the timing? Wouldn't the valves be completely closed at the very bottom of the lobe or should some be completely closed when the lobe is parallel to the head?
I know you guys have logged many miles doing it this way and I don't doubt this is correct. I'm just wanting to understand the reason.
If I measure exhaust #1 pointing up, the gap is looser. The same is true for the others that are measured from parallel.
I'm wondering if this method is just for convenience and close enough, or is there something related to the timing? Wouldn't the valves be completely closed at the very bottom of the lobe or should some be completely closed when the lobe is parallel to the head?
I know you guys have logged many miles doing it this way and I don't doubt this is correct. I'm just wanting to understand the reason.