Well I thank all of you who have helped me in my previous thread, which is still on the first page or two.
I ended up buying some washers from a hardware store and putting the stock rocker arm studs back on my car. I was hoping this would correct the issue I had before, since I did cross-thread the adjustable studs I bought which resulted in the rocker arms coming loose.
Well after putting the stock studs back on with the Comp 1.6 roller rocker arms and an aftermarket cam (listed in previous thread), I fired up the engine and prayed everything would be good. The engine fired immediately and sounded pretty good. I didn't hear any abnormal noises from the heads, and it sounded like it did before I rebuilt it. I listen for about a minute and all seems good.
So I started clearing a path in the garage to take my car for a test drive as it warmed up, but after a period of time I did begin to hear a chattering sound. This was all too familiar. Sounded like only one or two rocker arms were coming loose again. I continue to let it idle for about 20 minutes or so. The chattering did get worse, and I started to see an abnormal vibration in the engine that wasn't there when I first started it up. The exhaust also sounded like it was cutting out/missing a cylinder.
So at this point I'm pissed. I get into the car and tap the accelerator a bit to see what it sounds like when it revs up. It sounded bad, and the chattering sound I heard got louder. However, it didn't seem like all of the rocker arms were loose, just one or two from the front of the engine. I didn't really hear any chattering from the rear valve covers, but of course they are crammed underneath the Intake Manifolds, alternator, firewall, and various sensors.
I shut the damn car off and head into the house, wondering why the suckers had come loose. I really don't know what to do now. I torqued down my studs to a little over spec, 20 ft-lbs. I torqued down all the rocker arm nuts to the spec in the Haynes manual, 18 ft-lbs. I did use a washer on top of the pivot ball to make up for the 1.6 ratio rocker arms.
I even zero-lashed a few OEM rocker arms and then noted how many turns it took, and repeated the process with the roller rockers (on the same stud and pushrod). They were pretty much the same, although the roller rocker nuts stopped turning about 1/4 turn less than the stock rocker arm and nuts.
If anyone has some advice for me, that would be great. I'd really like to know if anyone has used the 1.6 roller rockers with an aftermarket cam, and leaving everything else OEM, in a '92 3.1L engine. Should I just put some lock-tight on the nuts to keep them from backing off?
Gah I probably don't make much sense right now. Forgive me.
I ended up buying some washers from a hardware store and putting the stock rocker arm studs back on my car. I was hoping this would correct the issue I had before, since I did cross-thread the adjustable studs I bought which resulted in the rocker arms coming loose.
Well after putting the stock studs back on with the Comp 1.6 roller rocker arms and an aftermarket cam (listed in previous thread), I fired up the engine and prayed everything would be good. The engine fired immediately and sounded pretty good. I didn't hear any abnormal noises from the heads, and it sounded like it did before I rebuilt it. I listen for about a minute and all seems good.
So I started clearing a path in the garage to take my car for a test drive as it warmed up, but after a period of time I did begin to hear a chattering sound. This was all too familiar. Sounded like only one or two rocker arms were coming loose again. I continue to let it idle for about 20 minutes or so. The chattering did get worse, and I started to see an abnormal vibration in the engine that wasn't there when I first started it up. The exhaust also sounded like it was cutting out/missing a cylinder.
So at this point I'm pissed. I get into the car and tap the accelerator a bit to see what it sounds like when it revs up. It sounded bad, and the chattering sound I heard got louder. However, it didn't seem like all of the rocker arms were loose, just one or two from the front of the engine. I didn't really hear any chattering from the rear valve covers, but of course they are crammed underneath the Intake Manifolds, alternator, firewall, and various sensors.
I shut the damn car off and head into the house, wondering why the suckers had come loose. I really don't know what to do now. I torqued down my studs to a little over spec, 20 ft-lbs. I torqued down all the rocker arm nuts to the spec in the Haynes manual, 18 ft-lbs. I did use a washer on top of the pivot ball to make up for the 1.6 ratio rocker arms.
I even zero-lashed a few OEM rocker arms and then noted how many turns it took, and repeated the process with the roller rockers (on the same stud and pushrod). They were pretty much the same, although the roller rocker nuts stopped turning about 1/4 turn less than the stock rocker arm and nuts.
If anyone has some advice for me, that would be great. I'd really like to know if anyone has used the 1.6 roller rockers with an aftermarket cam, and leaving everything else OEM, in a '92 3.1L engine. Should I just put some lock-tight on the nuts to keep them from backing off?
Gah I probably don't make much sense right now. Forgive me.
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