Pen, Paper, Straight edge
Process::
1.. Measure and record the current gaps on all valves
2.. If the gap say .03 ( as in the example for INTAKE #2 ) then youll
need to INCREASE that valves gap by .02...record that as noted in
the example. Record what amount of change you need for each
valve.
3.. Pull each valves shim and note what size it is..Measure it with
calipers because wear may have it different from the printed
size on it..VERIFY IT.
4.. Put the shim back in after noting what size it is on the sheet
under CURRENT SHIM..Do this to all valves.
5.. Now you can look at what each cylinder CURRENT GAP and CURRENT
SHIM is and decide if the gap is good or bad. Also this will tell you
can shuffle around.
6.. Once you have shuffled shims around, record which shim is in
each bucket under NEW SHIM.
7.. Remeasure each valve gap and record that under NEW GAP.
As you can see in the example on the sheet I posted, INTAKE 1 measured .05 ( requires no adjustment) and the CURRENT SHIM was 2.75.
So I made the notations as follows::
The CURRENT GAP was .05
The CURRENT SHIM was 2.75
The change in gap that I needed was 0
I DID NOT insttall a NEW SHIM ( the 2.75 was perfect )
And my NEW GAP is still at .05
Intake #2 was a different story. I measured and made the following notations:
The CURRENT GAP was at .03 ( It needs .02 MORE gap )
The CURRENT SHIM was a 2.72..so this tells me I need to use a 2.70 to achieve that .05 gap.
Installed a 2.70 shim and noted it under NEW SHIM and remeasured.
Verified the gap is now at .05 and noted that under NEW GAP.
Just fill in the bike model, the mileage, and date at the bottom and put it in with the rest of that bikes papers. ALSO NOTE..The NEW SHIM will tell you what shim is in each bucket next time you do an adjustment..just look at the sheet under NEW SHIM and thats what your final adjustment shim was when you finished the job.
ALWAYS CHECK SHIMS ON A DEAD COLD ENGINE
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