Phlebmaster Posted April 3, 2009 Report Share Posted April 3, 2009 (edited) I have pulled my cam towers on many occasions, So I thought I would share what works for me. ;) The reason not to do it is simple...binding your cam will wear it out the towers and send metal into your motor. Not good at all. But if you are very careful you can put everything back together without incident by doin this: #1. number your rockers in the order they sit in your head. carefully pull the rockers, springs and retainers keeping them as sets. #2. Put your motor at TDC and chock your chain tensioner and pull the cam gear. Don't lose your chain or you will be pulling your timing cover. I use a 1" dowel about 10" long. :) #3. loosten the 10mm allen head bolts that are holding your towers first and pull them out. Better be sure you have your torque wrench handy for re-installation. Re-torque can be tricky....you need to snug the head bolts back in first, then go in three to four steps tightening them down. Head bolt re-torque Try like 10lbs, 15lbs, 20lbs, 35lbs, and no more than the standard torque for the final step. Check your owners book for that last step. Then do a quick check on all head bolts at the top setting, being careful not to over torque them. Iv'e done that. :eek: #4. Now your cam should spin freely. Then take out all of the other cam tower bolts. They are 10mm socket. #5. Pulling the cam towers can be a bit tough at first..use a rubber mallet and tap very gently while you wiggle the cam towers. There will be several inserts that aid in lining up the towers and they get stuck sometimes. Be sure you DO NOT lose any of them. Your cam and towers should lift right off. Mark your towers 1-4!! Re-install #1. putting everything back in is pretty strait forward...just do the opposite of the steps you took to get it off. If using new cam towers 1-4 according to where they go on the head. #2. Now the tricky part.....getting the towers to line up takes some finesse. If the head is in the car, then you will need to insert the cam into all of the towers making sure you have the right tower on the right cam bearing before you install them. If you don't, you will be pulling them again I promise. :rolleyes: Use assembly oil like Lukas or something in the cam towers and on the cam bearing races. #3. line up the cam towers on the head and get the inserts I told you about lined up and gently set them in. Then you take the cam tower bolts and set them in and get them started, but don't tighten them. #4. Now put in your head bolts you pulled and get them started too leaving them loose. #5. The allignment..... now you take your cam and turn it many times as you make the bolts tighter and tighter. This will ensure your allignment and you will know if the towers are off before you finish. #6. once everything is tightened and torqued down, you put your rockers and springs back in. The trick with this part is making sure your cam does not move backward in the towers....keep it lined up!! Line up your timing marks and you are golden. Do not turn your cam with the motor at TDC...otherwise you could bend your valves on the #1 and #4 pistons. Thats about it. :D Edited April 6, 2009 by Phlebmaster forgot something. lol Quote Link to comment
banzai510(hainz) Posted April 3, 2009 Report Share Posted April 3, 2009 thats pretty good! I dont know if the head bolt part really needs to be on there but if it works for you. just remember the torq on the Cam Tower bolts is only 10-13pounds.The hole can strip put(happen 2 times with me!!!!!!) also some people use the Rubber mallet to wack a tower is not just right,(dont seat just right) Quote Link to comment
datzenmike Posted April 3, 2009 Report Share Posted April 3, 2009 I put all the springs, mouse trap, retainers, rocker, keys etc into a plastic zip-loc bag and number or label it. No guess work at assembly time. 1 Quote Link to comment
Phlebmaster Posted April 3, 2009 Author Report Share Posted April 3, 2009 Thanks Hainz! Coming from you that means alot. ;) I appreciate your input. :D Quote Link to comment
crackerjack69 Posted August 3, 2011 Report Share Posted August 3, 2011 When I went to put your old cam in, I found the cam sprocket would not go on. Everything I read points towards tensioner falling. It's still sitting where it should be, but maybe was crooked and jammed? Dunno, anyways while fiddling w/ I heard the chain jump a tooth on the crank sprocket. Watched Hainz's vids, and now gonna go get parts, and do a buncha work on the front of my motor. Thanks Ratsun, I save so much time and money working on my Datsun becuase of all of your skills/experience. Quote Link to comment
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.