ShadowsPapa
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Bill
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2019
- Threads
- 247
- Messages
- 40,445
- Reaction score
- 53,880
- Location
- Runnells, Iowa
- Vehicle(s)
- '25 JTMX, '23 JLU 4xe, '82 SX4, '73 Javelin
- Occupation
- Retired auto mechanic, frmr gov't ntwrk security admin
- Vehicle Showcase
- 3
That'll tear up distributor drive and driven gears - won't "stretch" the timing chain. they don't stretch, they wear. Each pin and each hole wears, causing an effective change in length.I remember like 20 years ago, when I had my '96 Grand Cherokee in for repairs...needed a new timing chain because the distributor (the second one I put in that lasted around 75K miles) had practically seized up..couldn't even turn it by hand...and that had stretched the timing chain.
That is normal for 80K miles or so to have timing chain wear.
Because it's a sort of worm gear drive, the camshaft distributor drive gear has crazy advantage over the driven gear on the lower end of the distributor. Tension will tear up the gears, but not cause chain issues.
Making it worse is the fact that on some engines over the decades, the camshaft sprocket was lined with nylon - the teeth were nylon to make it run quieter, reduce chain against sprocket noise. The nylon wore down some, the chain wore, and in some cases, the nylon literally shed from the cam sprocket.
But I'd bet a steak dinner the timing chain wasn't the result of a tight distributor.......
it's like "my neighbor fell and broke her hip".
No, she didn't. Her hip broke causing the fall. Low bone density - weak hips, joint gives out, they fall.
Lack of oil changes, or excessively high oil pressure, or tight distributor, binding, etc. - will cut into the teeth. Yes, high oil pressure is a BAD thing, not good. It eats up oil pump drive components.
So the first thing excessive pressure or a tight distributor (which is the same net effect) will cause is gear wear. It would take a damned tight distributor to cause any damage because the resistance of the oil pump is really high if you've ever primed an older engine and felt the resistance as pressure built up as you primed it.
The 4.0, among others, used a double-roller design to make it quieter, smoother, reduce friction and heat and help reduce wear to some extent -
Having installed them on two Jeeps - I strongly doubt they could do it start to finish and do a nice job in 4 hours. Just getting the rocker panels marked and keeping things straight and lined up takes time. Then there's removing the interior panels, running the wiring through the floor plugs and sealing those back up making them water tight again, positioning the magnets and switches. Naw, no way. Not 4 hours.I checked around before installing mine a couple of months ago and the cheapest quote was $150 an hour and they said they could install them in 4 hours. Had they been closer than 2 hours away, I’d have let them do it. I am as slow as anyone you’ll find and was scared of the body bolts so I was very cautious and took my time. I did it in the driveway on a weekend but probably had 10 or 12 hours in them altogether.
Heating the body bolts, sometimes having to file a bit off the bolts to get the brackets in (because they have some knurling to keep the big washers in place on the bolts - brackets don't always slide over the bolt without "adjusting" the bolt a bit)
Do they just tighten the crap out of things, or properly torque things - each and every bolt?
I'd love to see one guy do JT RSE power steps in just 4 hours start to finish - and then I want to check their work.........
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