I knew that if I mis-spoke, someone would jump in.
Guess I'm still not perfect, huh?
I was actually thinking of type. There are some variations on design so I was wondering more what type I should be looking at getting.GripGreg wrote:Maybe NAPA? Sears? Sears has the lifetime guarantee!! No questions asked!
As long it the tool is Craftsman!
The truck that sells tools to mechanics has it, but, it's a lil too pricey.
Good luck,,,,Greg
What nut on the front of the head? There's 8 bolts but no nuts but they're only 6MM. You aren't talking about the nut on the front of the cam are you? That can stay right where it is, unbolt the sprocket with the 4 10MM head bolts.Matthew A. wrote:Progress has been stalled lately, namely due to the weather, but partially due to the nut that won't come off the front of the cylinder head.
It's the large nut that secures the camshaft on one end and is on the same end that connects to the timing gear. You have to flatten a large retaining washer to remove it. It's about 46mm. I'll get a picture tomorrow if it helps.Mike W. wrote:What nut on the front of the head? There's 8 bolts but no nuts but they're only 6MM. You aren't talking about the nut on the front of the cam are you? That can stay right where it is, unbolt the sprocket with the 4 10MM head bolts.Matthew A. wrote:Progress has been stalled lately, namely due to the weather, but partially due to the nut that won't come off the front of the cylinder head.
You do not have to remove that nut to remove the cam. It's held in by the flange held by two 10MM head bolts. You will have to remove the rocker shafts to get to the valves. Removing the big 46MM nut will do nothing besides allow you to replace the flange the sprocket bolt to.Matthew A. wrote:It's the large nut that secures the camshaft on one end and is on the same end that connects to the timing gear. You have to flatten a large retaining washer to remove it. It's about 46mm. I'll get a picture tomorrow if it helps.Mike W. wrote:What nut on the front of the head? There's 8 bolts but no nuts but they're only 6MM. You aren't talking about the nut on the front of the cam are you? That can stay right where it is, unbolt the sprocket with the 4 10MM head bolts.Matthew A. wrote:Progress has been stalled lately, namely due to the weather, but partially due to the nut that won't come off the front of the cylinder head.
And recommendations on valve spring compression tools while I'm picking your brain?
EDIT: Found one that should do the job, and ordered it. With any luck I may not need to pull the camshaft to get to the valves.





Sadly I can't afford to the the bottom end unless I have to do the bottom end at the moment. Plus that requires stuff I don't have access to right now to pull the engine out.GripGreg wrote:I know you said the oil was like mud, but, a picture is worth a thousand words!!
WOW!
The previous owner didn't care at all about this E12!!![]()
You just may need to do the bottom end too. It's really bad!
Tensioner spring is out and the dowel lines up with its hole, but the sprocket seems to not line up properly once I get the first bolt in. And thanks to the awkward position I can't visually check the alignment. I'm working on the problem though.Mike W. wrote:You do have the tensioner piston removed, correct? You may have to move the cam or crank just a touch to get things to line up, but it shouldn't be much. Keep the dowel in mind too.