I'm new to the forum - if I've posted in the wrong place, I'm sorry.
My son and I are rebuilding the engine in his 1995 Grand Am SE.
This is a generation II 3.1L V6 (VIN "M")
I purchased new pushrods and new rocker arms for the engine last week, because an earlier mishap damaged some of the old ones.
The rocker arms on this engine are the ball and nut type, and they are not the roller type. The rocker arm studs are narrower where they are threaded than on the unthreaded part. (I estimate the threads are 8mm dia. and the unthreaded stud is 10 mm - but I'm just eyeballing)
The new rocker arms came with a nut that's too big to fit the old stud, so we attemped to use the new rocker arm and ball and the original nut. The manual we are using said we should torque the nut to 18 ft-lbs. Well, the nut bottomed out on the threads. Alex was using a "click" type torque wrench to tighten it and before the wrench clicked, we had a broken stud. The nut and threaded portion of the stud broke off.
Most of the parts houses in town couldn't find a number for a replacement stud. I stopped at the Chevrolet dealer's parts department and they checked for me. They said the type of stud I have is a discontinued part
One parts house did find a stud and we ordered a complete set. The new studs have no "shoulder" on them. That is, the threads are the same diameter as the lower unthreaded portion of the stud. The new studs are threaded farther down than the old ones, and the nuts on the new rocker arms fit these threads. So, it looks like I can't just tighten a nut to the stop and torque it properly - I need to know how to properly adjust the rocker arms. My manual doesn't give this information - it must assume that I have the original non-adjustable type of rocker arm.
Will the new studs/rocker arms work with my engine? If so, how do I adjust the rocker arm nuts correctly?
Thanks in advance for your help.
(I know that I can probably rummage in the salvage yard of the machine shop and possibly find another of the old type studs. I suspect that some of the old ones are fatigued, though, and I'd rather replace them with new if I can)
My son and I are rebuilding the engine in his 1995 Grand Am SE.
This is a generation II 3.1L V6 (VIN "M")
I purchased new pushrods and new rocker arms for the engine last week, because an earlier mishap damaged some of the old ones.
The rocker arms on this engine are the ball and nut type, and they are not the roller type. The rocker arm studs are narrower where they are threaded than on the unthreaded part. (I estimate the threads are 8mm dia. and the unthreaded stud is 10 mm - but I'm just eyeballing)
The new rocker arms came with a nut that's too big to fit the old stud, so we attemped to use the new rocker arm and ball and the original nut. The manual we are using said we should torque the nut to 18 ft-lbs. Well, the nut bottomed out on the threads. Alex was using a "click" type torque wrench to tighten it and before the wrench clicked, we had a broken stud. The nut and threaded portion of the stud broke off.
Most of the parts houses in town couldn't find a number for a replacement stud. I stopped at the Chevrolet dealer's parts department and they checked for me. They said the type of stud I have is a discontinued part
One parts house did find a stud and we ordered a complete set. The new studs have no "shoulder" on them. That is, the threads are the same diameter as the lower unthreaded portion of the stud. The new studs are threaded farther down than the old ones, and the nuts on the new rocker arms fit these threads. So, it looks like I can't just tighten a nut to the stop and torque it properly - I need to know how to properly adjust the rocker arms. My manual doesn't give this information - it must assume that I have the original non-adjustable type of rocker arm.
Will the new studs/rocker arms work with my engine? If so, how do I adjust the rocker arm nuts correctly?
Thanks in advance for your help.
(I know that I can probably rummage in the salvage yard of the machine shop and possibly find another of the old type studs. I suspect that some of the old ones are fatigued, though, and I'd rather replace them with new if I can)
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