It is really incredible to see how many people have no idea how to tension the timing belt properly on b series. The tensioner spring is calibrated to pull the correct amount of slack out on the right side.
Im doing this on my 2001 integra. My cams are not even. The up is in two different places. How do i adjust those properly? Any help would be greatly appreciated, im in a bit over my head b
Hello, I have done the timing job three times now, according to how it is done in the haynes manual and also this video, It rotates freely with a small amount of resistance(spring resistance I assume) but when I move it to tdc and examine the position of everything, the intake cam will be at tdc, the crankshaft sprocket will be at the mark(tdc) BUT the exhaust cam is one tooth to the clockwise(top goes to right if looking at motor from the crankshaft side), Is it wise to move the exhaust sprocket over one tooth? if it spins with minimal interference is it worth trying to rotate that gear one and then seeing if it spins? Worried I have messed something up. Thanks
Dont use this video, it sucks. The video by those guys who restore hondas is better. Use a cam gear holder tool, theyre cheap and make life a lot easier
You can if you want but you wont be able to see the bottom mark with out having it all removed. There is really no need to set the marks before removing the belt.
WARNING: At 14:10 of the video, he shows how to check for TDC with a screw driver on piston#1, then with the timing belt removed, he rotates the crankshaft pulley. Only do this while the ting belt is installed because it also spins the camshaft pulleys, which opens & closes the valves, accordingly. This is an INTEFERENCE ENGINE. This means that if the timing belt rips or is not installed,the valves will bent by the pistons. Now you need a new engine. I wouldn't be surprised if he bent 1 or 2 valves at least. On NON-INTERFERENCE engines, like my 1991 4Runner & my 1990 Miata, I can spin the crankshaft as many times as I want with no timing belt installed, & the pistons will never touch the valves. There's a gap large enough that piston & valves won't interfere with each other, hence: a NON-INTERFERENCE ENGINE. However, 1st generation CR-V are INTERFERENCE ENGINES. No timing belt, no spinning of the crankshaft pulley/Dampner.
Yes, it is an interference engine. No, you can not bend a valve by turning the crank by hand. In most cases with the B,D,F and H series engines, if the timing belt breaks going over 2k rpm or more, you will bend a valve, running at less then 2k rpm when ur belt breaks, 9 times out of 10 you will not bend a valve. I have 30 years of experience with Hondas. Ive been through any and all scenarios when it comes to breaking a belt.
very good explanation Mr . Jay DM. i Enjoyed watching repeatedly
Great video thanks man 😎👏
It is really incredible to see how many people have no idea how to tension the timing belt properly on b series. The tensioner spring is calibrated to pull the correct amount of slack out on the right side.
How abiut you make a video for us mr smarty pants
@@Naturalgainz Making videos to try and make money on youtube is a waste of time.
@@Lafue108 it is really incredible to see how many people have no idea LaFue108 is a dumb ass 😂😂
Do it for free then lmao
@@alexafa316 When you score the cams or snap a cam sprocket off due to stupidity, good luck finding a new head or b-series engine.
Didn’t know Tom Hank makes how to videos.
After timing everything i put #1 piston a tdc and my cam gear aligment marks arent aligned is that okay?
Get it right or do it twice bro. Its gotta be perfect . As someone whos broken it down 10x because of it being off a tooth, it has to be spot on
Im doing this on my 2001 integra. My cams are not even. The up is in two different places. How do i adjust those properly? Any help would be greatly appreciated, im in a bit over my head b
Hello, I have done the timing job three times now, according to how it is done in the haynes manual and also this video, It rotates freely with a small amount of resistance(spring resistance I assume) but when I move it to tdc and examine the position of everything, the intake cam will be at tdc, the crankshaft sprocket will be at the mark(tdc) BUT the exhaust cam is one tooth to the clockwise(top goes to right if looking at motor from the crankshaft side), Is it wise to move the exhaust sprocket over one tooth? if it spins with minimal interference is it worth trying to rotate that gear one and then seeing if it spins? Worried I have messed something up. Thanks
Dont use this video, it sucks. The video by those guys who restore hondas is better. Use a cam gear holder tool, theyre cheap and make life a lot easier
Aren't You Supposed To Align The Timing marks before You Remove The Old Belt First????
You can if you want but you wont be able to see the bottom mark with out having it all removed. There is really no need to set the marks before removing the belt.
👍
WARNING: At 14:10 of the video, he shows how to check for TDC with a screw driver on piston#1, then with the timing belt removed, he rotates the crankshaft pulley. Only do this while the ting belt is installed because it also spins the camshaft pulleys, which opens & closes the valves, accordingly. This is an INTEFERENCE ENGINE. This means that if the timing belt rips or is not installed,the valves will bent by the pistons. Now you need a new engine. I wouldn't be surprised if he bent 1 or 2 valves at least. On NON-INTERFERENCE engines, like my 1991 4Runner & my 1990 Miata, I can spin the crankshaft as many times as I want with no timing belt installed, & the pistons will never touch the valves. There's a gap large enough that piston & valves won't interfere with each other, hence: a NON-INTERFERENCE ENGINE. However, 1st generation CR-V are INTERFERENCE ENGINES. No timing belt, no spinning of the crankshaft pulley/Dampner.
Yes, it is an interference engine. No, you can not bend a valve by turning the crank by hand. In most cases with the B,D,F and H series engines, if the timing belt breaks going over 2k rpm or more, you will bend a valve, running at less then 2k rpm when ur belt breaks, 9 times out of 10 you will not bend a valve. I have 30 years of experience with Hondas. Ive been through any and all scenarios when it comes to breaking a belt.
Your way of tensioning the timing belt is not as described in the workshop manual 🤔.
Yes, the OP has no business publishing videos on b-series engines. This is a hack job.
D15z