TrenchFoot
12-27-2011, 21:26
First off, I'd like to apologize for asking something that's probably been asked 100s of times before. I dug around the boards but came up more confused than before I started.
I am working to prep my 6.2 for my Jeep Wagoneer conversion and would appreciate some help with the correct procedure for replacing the timing chain. The engine came out of a 1993 P30 Step Van and is a 599 block (V belt) with 100k miles on it when it was pulled.
I am about to pull the injector pump, water pump, harmonic balancer, and timing chain/gears. From reading the Haynes manual, pulling the IP doesn't require worrying about specific timing, other than not rotating the engine after pulling it. I plan to static time by the marks on the IP housing then have my local dealer dial it in after the swap.
For replacing the chains and gears, the manual specifies a complex procedure for finding TDC. It seems to me that if I line up the gear markings and ensure that #1 is not on the exhaust stroke, I should be OK without breaking out a dial caliper.
The questions that come to mind:
Can this be done without taking off the valve covers?
Do the timing chain gears need to be swapped on a 100k engine?
Do I really have to worry about rotating the engine after pulling the IP (is this only relevant if I roll it a full turn or more)?
Can someone add some clarity to this procedure or point to a writeup somewhere?
Thanks in advance for any help.
I am working to prep my 6.2 for my Jeep Wagoneer conversion and would appreciate some help with the correct procedure for replacing the timing chain. The engine came out of a 1993 P30 Step Van and is a 599 block (V belt) with 100k miles on it when it was pulled.
I am about to pull the injector pump, water pump, harmonic balancer, and timing chain/gears. From reading the Haynes manual, pulling the IP doesn't require worrying about specific timing, other than not rotating the engine after pulling it. I plan to static time by the marks on the IP housing then have my local dealer dial it in after the swap.
For replacing the chains and gears, the manual specifies a complex procedure for finding TDC. It seems to me that if I line up the gear markings and ensure that #1 is not on the exhaust stroke, I should be OK without breaking out a dial caliper.
The questions that come to mind:
Can this be done without taking off the valve covers?
Do the timing chain gears need to be swapped on a 100k engine?
Do I really have to worry about rotating the engine after pulling the IP (is this only relevant if I roll it a full turn or more)?
Can someone add some clarity to this procedure or point to a writeup somewhere?
Thanks in advance for any help.