Jake59
Active member
- 170
- 102
- 43
- Location
- Kaggevinne, Flanders, belgium
Good evening all,
Been trying to determine the amount of stretch my timing chain has and with only 25000 miles on this M1009, my findings are of concern to say the least.
I found the slack to allow between 7 and 9 degrees of crankshaft rotation before the valve train is engaged.
This really sounds like a lot, considering the low mileage on this M1009; that is assuming the tachometer is correct...
On the other hand, having lived military life for 36 years, I know how often vehicles are left idling for extended periods to assure batteries stay charged and radios can be operated.
This puts limited mileage on the instrument panel but the total engine operating hours increase considerably.
Just wondering if extended idling - or operating at creep speed - could cause such (excessive?) chain stretch ?
And, how many degrees slack is “normal” or acceptable before timing set replacement is recommended ?
Thank you,
Jake
Been trying to determine the amount of stretch my timing chain has and with only 25000 miles on this M1009, my findings are of concern to say the least.
I found the slack to allow between 7 and 9 degrees of crankshaft rotation before the valve train is engaged.
This really sounds like a lot, considering the low mileage on this M1009; that is assuming the tachometer is correct...
On the other hand, having lived military life for 36 years, I know how often vehicles are left idling for extended periods to assure batteries stay charged and radios can be operated.
This puts limited mileage on the instrument panel but the total engine operating hours increase considerably.
Just wondering if extended idling - or operating at creep speed - could cause such (excessive?) chain stretch ?
And, how many degrees slack is “normal” or acceptable before timing set replacement is recommended ?
Thank you,
Jake