86 t-tops
10-14-2014, 11:11 AM
So I've seen this done a few times... slip the crank gear on, put the timing chain around the cam gear, loop the chain under crank gear, line up the timing marks on the gears, and push them on... this was always done with a stock crank...
I tried to do the same on the engine I'm building and the crank gear is very tight... can't push it all the way on... once it hits the keyway on the crank it wont move by hand... I'm dealing with an aftermarket crank (Probe Industries), and a Ford Racing gear set...
I'm assuming that the aftermarket crank is the problem but have done some reserach as well... In general some sites talk about either pressing the crank gear on or heating it up to get it on...
Either way I wont be able to do this while holding the cam gear and timing chain in place as I install them, which the instructions say to do (install both gears and timing chain at the same time).
Any comments or guidance on this?
Thanks
I tried to do the same on the engine I'm building and the crank gear is very tight... can't push it all the way on... once it hits the keyway on the crank it wont move by hand... I'm dealing with an aftermarket crank (Probe Industries), and a Ford Racing gear set...
I'm assuming that the aftermarket crank is the problem but have done some reserach as well... In general some sites talk about either pressing the crank gear on or heating it up to get it on...
Either way I wont be able to do this while holding the cam gear and timing chain in place as I install them, which the instructions say to do (install both gears and timing chain at the same time).
Any comments or guidance on this?
Thanks