dolt
Well-Known Member
Thanks for all the tips and info. Ive tried so many different procedures Ive got muscles in my fingertips now. S&S said forget about tdc and do each lifter one at a time at its lowest point. wait for bleed down after each one. I havent tried that yet.
Ive rotated rear wheel where exhaust rises falls, then intake rises and falls and I can hear the compression come out spark plug hole. I go to other side of bike and roll rear wheel till I find the highest point in piston. I have a long skewer marked where the highest part has been. I can say that I have not seen the top of the piston through the spark plug hole.
Ive done this over a half dozen times and the piston always seems to be a couple to few inches deep in cylinder. I will admit it is hard to roll the wheel and get it to hold steady whole I check the height of piston through spark plug hole.
Should I be able to see the piston?
Im doing this while bike is on floor lift and the wheel always wants to move a bit more after compression.
If my math is right, 32 tpi x.140 = 4.48 or 4 turns 3 flats.
Thanks for any confirmation or change to my procedure above.
The piston doesn't have to be precisedly at TDC on the compression stroke, just close either coming up or going down; don't worry about being able to see the top of the piston. 4.5 turns will set preload at .140". I am not saying you have adjusted pushrods wrong, just saying that it is easy to get it wrong by simply watching the lifters and adjusting when both are at their lowest point. If you are confident in your pushrod adjustment, time to start lookng at the lifters.
Did you have stronger valve springs installed as part of the upgrade?