kdaddy
Active Member
I just busted mine open and took a look today. 14 bucks and an hour labor for me and the real hassle was getting the exhaust off with no help. (Single tube full length on true dual Hard Krome exhaust). 22,000 miles and hardly any wear at all. There was maybe a .010" groove at most. The rear is a bit aggravating to view, however as many have posted a dental mirror works great. It just takes a few minutes to get the right light over the cam plate. I think there are lots of contributors to the ill fate of bad tensioners. Cam gear to crank gear runout causing a sawing effect, rough edges on the chain from the stamping operations of the links, ( dull die sections and punches), lubrication, how you ride, and even the exact makeup of the polymar batch/lot used for your particular parts. I personally think its a mix of variables because there is too much hit and miss in the fortune.
I personally run synthetics in all 3 holes since I put 320,000 on a 95 GMC truck with not so much as a bolt turned on the drive train, still had 60lbs of pressure on a cold start and 40 down the road when I finally sold her to a buddy.
I will ride her all summer and later next fall I will go with the SE upgrade so I dont have to inspect once a year. My only concern with the SE upgrade is there are no outer bearings. The cam runs in the camplate hole. I realize its hard anodized and that should be about 70 rockwell, however the substrate underneath is aluminum and I have to give that some thought before jumping in.
I personally run synthetics in all 3 holes since I put 320,000 on a 95 GMC truck with not so much as a bolt turned on the drive train, still had 60lbs of pressure on a cold start and 40 down the road when I finally sold her to a buddy.
I will ride her all summer and later next fall I will go with the SE upgrade so I dont have to inspect once a year. My only concern with the SE upgrade is there are no outer bearings. The cam runs in the camplate hole. I realize its hard anodized and that should be about 70 rockwell, however the substrate underneath is aluminum and I have to give that some thought before jumping in.