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Engine Tuning
Dear Mr. And Mrs. Merjanian,
It is with regret and disappointment that I write
to you, this letter today. I know how you look forward to Dr.
Motorhead’s articles. The sadness is that he has not written an
article for this edition of The Boathouse. He has gone away to a
land far, far away; a land where gentle breezes blow and sun
drenched days allow him to relax and forget about the daily troubles
and worries. Although I am now in Minnesota and he is in the South
Pacific, he has not had a chance to review questions or respond with
whimsical answers. I received this note yesterday.
Dear Piston,
Now that you are back in Minnesota and I am not, I feel that it is
time for you to step up to the plate and write an article for this
edition of The Boathouse. You will find in the top left drawer of my
desk a number of questions written and sent in by our loyal readers.
I know you will do a great job and stand in for me while I am taking
a long needed break.
I am spending my spring vacation here on Easter
Island. Next, I am taking a long journey north. I don’t know
exactly when I will be back. You see, I heard of a great old boat I
am going to scoop before Mitch LaPointe or F. Todd Warner have a
chance to beat me to it. It is located somewhere on a hillside.
Mount Arafat is the name I believe. Anyway, I’ll fill you in on
all the details when I get back. Thanks for your help and remember,
don’t throw any wild parties in the shop while I’m gone.
“Doc”
So you have it, straight from the good Doctors mouth. I have read
many of the wonderful questions and humorous stories sent in by our
listeners. I have also tried to decide which one to respond to, so
many good choices. However, I am brought back to my recent business
college lectures. “Delegate,” Professor Hornsby would teach.
“Without delegating, your business will never grow or possibly
fail.” Delegate, delegate continued to run through my mind. And
then it hit me like a ton of coconuts. “ITS SPRING”, and time
for Mr. Merjanian to submit his annual article on spring tuning and
start-up procedures. After dodging that bullet, I remembered that
it’s Friday and time to party. The doctor said I couldn’t have
any wild parties, but he didn’t say I couldn’t go to any wild
parties. So…
TOGA, Piston
PS: Forgot one important thing. As the Doctor would say, “Take it
away Steve.”
Thank you, Piston for that rousing introduction. This is the fourth
time this article has appeared in The BoatHouse and
Dr. Motorhead feels it’s always appropriate for spring fitting
out. I always like to accommodate the good doctor, so --- once again
--- here goes.
Adjusting Chris Craft (Hercules) 4 & 6 cylinder engines is a
simple and logical procedure. I shall assume there is fresh oil in
the engine, the shaft is aligned, the transmission is adjusted, the
propeller is in good shape, the fuel pump is functional and the fuel
line and fuel sediment bowl are clean.
VALVES: The greatest initial concern
should be valve adjustment, which assures adequate valve heat
dissipation and engine breathing. Consult the engine chart on page
20 to determine the intake and exhaust valve gap adjustments for
your engine. With the engine cold, remove the valve covers which are
underneath the exhaust manifold and behind the carburetor. The
smaller blocks (i.e.: A, B, H & K types) use 7/16” nuts for
the valve tappets while the larger blocks (i.e.: L, M & W types)
use 1/2” nuts. Use a long thin section open-end wrench which is
specially made for adjusting valves. This valve wrench will fit the
lifter while conventional open end wrenches (7/16” & 1/2”)
will fit the jamb nut and tappet. The lifter (two flats) is on the
bottom of the assembly, next is the jamb nut (hexagonal nut) and the
tappet is the (hexagonal bolt) on top. Between the tappet bolt face
and the valve stem is the gap to be adjusted. The first valve at
either end of the engine is an exhaust. The next two are intakes;
the next two are exhausts, etc., etc. Have a friend turn over the
engine by hand (a socket wrench on a flange coupling or flywheel
bolt works fine) while you watch the intake and exhaust valves for a
selected cylinder to go up and down. Turn the engine an additional
90 degrees once both valves are down and seated. Use a feeler gauge
to measure the exhaust and intake gaps. They will probably be tight.
Put the thin section valve wrench on the lifter (bottom, two flats)
and use another wrench to loosen the jamb nut (hexagonal nut). You
can now turn the tappet (hexagonal bolt) to adjust the gap. If you
tighten the jamb nut just enough to let the tappet turn, you can
snug up the jamb nut without moving the tappet out of adjustment.
Repeat this procedure for the remaining valves, doing a cylinder at
a time.
IGNITION: The standard Kettering ignition system consists of
a coil, condenser (capacitor), distributor, ballast resistor (12
volts only), ignition switch, spark plugs, high voltage ignition
wires, low voltage primary wires and a battery. The battery should
be fully charged. Check the spark plug wires for cracks, frays and
tight connections at the distributor cap, spark plugs and coil. Use
Champion UJ6 or J8J plugs for cast iron heads and H-10 or H- 10J
plugs for aluminum heads. The newer designations for the UJ6 &
J8J are J6C (normal running) & J8C (hotter plug for low speed
operation). All spark plugs are gapped to 0.028 inches and the
points are adjusted to 0.022 inches after being filed clean. To
adjust the point gap, first remove the distributor cap and rotor.
Crank the engine with the starter in short bursts until the points
are wide open (point-rubbing block on peak of cam). Adjust the point
gap by loosening the jamb nut and turning stationary point until a
0.022” feeler gauge just passes through the point gap. Reassemble
the distributor rotor and cap. To check for spark, remove the coil
wire from the center of the distributor cap and position this loose
wire about 1/16 inch from a head bolt. Crank the engine starter with
the ignition ON and look for a white spark at this 1/16-inch gap. If
there is no spark, make sure the points are clean and try again. If
again there is no spark, change the condenser (capacitor) and try
again.
WARNING: TO AVOID HIGH VOLTAGE, SHOCKS, DON’T HOLD ONTO THE
COIL,
WIRE WHEN CRANKING THE ENGINE.
Another common problem is a short in the low voltage wire that goes
from the negative side of the coil to the distributor. It usually
shorts out where the wire passes through the distributor body
because the insulating material has broken down. Replacement parts
are hard to find, but carefully jury-rigged electrician’s tape,
rubber washers and heat-shrink tubing will work. Some additional
preventive maintenance includes filing the rotor tip clean, cleaning
the inside of the distributor cap of any carbon tracks left by the
rotor, checking the spark advance weights (below the distributor
point plate) for free movement, lubricating the advance weights with
a dry spray (e.g.) LPS, WD40, CRC, etc.) and lubricating the
distributor shaft felt wick (under the rotor) with light machine
oil. Ignition coils usually fail slowly and will generally give a
red spark at the above cited 1/16-inch head bolt/coil wire gap,
instead of a good white spark. Both oil filled and epoxy coils can
be used with good results. Please refer to the following chart when
selecting an ignition coil. For example, a six volt coil will
eventually overheat and reduce its output when used with an
eight-volt battery.
VOLTS DESCRIPTION PRIMARY RESISTANCE
Volts Type Primary Resistance, Six 6 Volt Coil 1.6 ohms, Eight 12
Volt w/ Ballast 2.2 ohms
Twelve 12 Volt Coil 3.2 ohms
NOTE: I have not found ballast resistors in any of the early
1950’s vintage twelve-volt boats. However, look for the ballast
resistor if you have a newer twelve-volt boat. The
primary winding resistance of the coil can be measured between the
plus (+) and the minus (-) terminals.
CARBURETION
The carburetor atomizes the gasoline and mixes it with the incoming
air so the engine can burn it. If the engine or carburetor has been
rebuilt, a good approximate adjustment is 1.5 turns open from the
fully closed position on both the idle and the high speed jets. The
high-speed jet is near the bottom of the carburetor. The idle jet is
closer to the to the intake manifold and is found inboard of the
throttle linkage idle stop screw. If the engine ran before, the
carburetor is probably set correctly.
STARTING UP
A dry-land start-up should have water going through the engine.
Remove the intake hose from the water pump and replace it with a
shorter piece of hose that will go in to a one to three gallon pail
inside the boat. Use a garden hose to keep this pail filled while
running the engine. The fuel pump has a hand operated lever which
should be worked until the carburetor float chamber is filled and
the hand lever has a soft feel. The carburetor air horn may have
accumulated water and gasoline during storage. Remove the 7/16”
plug on the bottom of the carburetor and drain away this fluid.
Replace the plug. The engine is now ready for a dry land start. Run
water into the pail for the water pump, close the choke (pull-out
choke knob) and crank the engine until it pops. Open the choke
(push-in choke knob), open the throttle about two-thirds and
continue cranking. The engine should start. Run the engine with
water going through it to clear out any storage oil and
condensation. Some tuning adjustments can be made on dry land (e.g.
idle jet and throttle stop) and they are discussed as part of the
in-the-water tune-up.
IN-THE-WATER TUNE-UP
Assuming the above steps regarding spark plugs, rotor, cap, coil,
and points have been done, we can now adjust the engine. Allow
sufficient time for the boat to soak up, which can vary from six
hours to many days. A tachometer/dwell meter is very useful for the
tune-up procedure. The six (6) cylinder engines should be set for 35
degrees of dwell angle and the four (4) cylinder engines should be
set for 55 degrees of dwell angle. If necessary, re-adjust the
points to achieve this dwell angle. Accelerate the engine up and
down quickly. If the dwell angle varies more than four (4) degrees
for the six (6) cylinder engines or six (6) degrees for the four (4)
cylinder engines, change the points. This test indicates a weak
point spring. Put the engine in gear and move away from the dock.
Have a friend drive the boat. Loosen the clamp on the bottom of the
distributor and run the boat at full throttle. Twist the distributor
clockwise and counter clockwise until you achieve the maximum RPM.
Back off the maximum by 50 RPM by twisting in the clockwise
direction and tighten the distributor clamp. The engine is now
timed. If the engine loses power during the
season, check the dwell angle before changing the timing. While the
boat is at full throttle, turn in the high-speed jet on the bottom
of the carburetor until the RPM drops. Back out the high-speed jet
to 1/4 turn beyond the maximum RPM. Slow the boat to an idle. Adjust
the throttle stop screw to about 300 RPM over the recommended idle
RPM from the chart on page 20. Turn in the low speed jet (located
midway up the carburetor, inboard of the throttle stop screw) until
the RPM drops. Back out the low speed jet to 1/4 turn beyond maximum
idle RPM. Readjust the throttle stop screw to the recommended idle
RPM from the chart on page 20. Your engine is now properly tuned.
!!!! HAPPY BOATING !!!!
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