Making the GN Right

1st thing that jumps out is the timing chain tensioner. It's not suppose to be there. It gets deleted when using a double roller chain. Lucky it's still intact. They usually get mangled when used on a double roller chain.
Rick
I hear this statement a lot but it has not been my experience. I used a tensioner/damper on a double roller chain in an engine for my '87 GN I built back in '94 "before I knew any better". I was really concerned about it after reading all the "bad" things on this site about using one with a double roller. I tore the engine down last year to do upgrades (roller cam, ported heads/manifold) with the engine having just under 50K miles on it. The tensioner looked almost like the day I put it in. It had very little wear on it. So I'm thinking there has to be another reason why people are "mangling" the tensioners. I still use them in my engines. It keeps the chain from "whipping" when they start to stretch and loosen up a bit. Maybe the type of oil being used?
 
Been a while but I finally got a few hours out in the garage. The engine is now sealed up. Time to focus on the engine bay.
4f6d63e1f785b7bc7263f107f4bb469e.jpg



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Looks nice. Did you end up doing head gaskets?
 
I hear this statement a lot but it has not been my experience. I used a tensioner/damper on a double roller chain in an engine for my '87 GN I built back in '94 "before I knew any better". I was really concerned about it after reading all the "bad" things on this site about using one with a double roller. I tore the engine down last year to do upgrades (roller cam, ported heads/manifold) with the engine having just under 50K miles on it. The tensioner looked almost like the day I put it in. It had very little wear on it. So I'm thinking there has to be another reason why people are "mangling" the tensioners. I still use them in my engines. It keeps the chain from "whipping" when they start to stretch and loosen up a bit. Maybe the type of oil being used?



You can't use a tentioner on a chain that has 'dogbone' shaped links. If the outside of the chain is smooth like on this engine it won't hammer the plastic foot to death.



[img[https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20170130/1a8278f27822f60790e54c570f4abc49.jpg[/img]

Are you going to get rid of the old valve covers?.... and will they clear roller rockers? :)



Also, that's not an ATR ram air. If so, it would have Applied Technologies embossed across the top and house a larger 14" filter.
 
Looks nice. Did you end up doing head gaskets?

No, I thought they were leaking oil externally but there is no way they could in the location I found the oil. It must have been residual from the valve covers leaking.
I checked for blown head gaskets while the car was still running and all checked good.
Hopefully not a mistake.


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You can't use a tentioner on a chain that has 'dogbone' shaped links. If the outside of the chain is smooth like on this engine it won't hammer the plastic foot to death.



[img[https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20170130/1a8278f27822f60790e54c570f4abc49.jpg[/img]

Are you going to get rid of the old valve covers?.... and will they clear roller rockers? :)



Also, that's not an ATR ram air. If so, it would have Applied Technologies embossed across the top and house a larger 14" filter.

Sorry already sold the valve covers ..... and yes they cleared roller rockers.


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You can't use a tentioner on a chain that has 'dogbone' shaped links. If the outside of the chain is smooth like on this engine it won't hammer the plastic foot to death.
.
Here is a picture of the tensioner in a motor I built in '94. The motor had 51,000 miles on it when I pulled it to do upgrades. The tensioner had almost no wear on it. P1010120.JPG
 
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