Yes it is the serpentine set-up with the huge pully/harmonic balancer thing.
depending on the clearances, not all the valves may be badly damaged. some will be worse than others.I have a 1.6 hydro engine i picked up second hand with a wrecked crank nose (it was an industrial engine). when i pulled the head apart, I found 2 exhaust valves badly bent, 1 more just a little bent and 1 fine.
oh no thats horrible i just seen you two driving it the other day to. uggghh. well when ever youre doin some work give me a shout if youd like a hand. almost guaranted theres bent valves if it put your timming out any little bit remember i learnt the hard way to. but yea gimma a shout. time to upgrade to that k24 at the same time :p not sure if much is compatible of that extra motor i got sitting there but let me know .
So, you think that the pulley has slipped, and done some damage, maybe bent valves etc, but only slight [hopefully as it was near idle]. It then ran rough, so at least some of the valves are operating on some of the cylinders. So my question is:How can it run and, [assuming the timing can't correct itself], not clash with the other valves, and bring all cylinders into non operation, without you resetting the pulley?Or have you? Maybe it is some other problem
Quote from: Thezorn on November 02, 2010, 08:33:29 pmYes it is the serpentine set-up with the huge pully/harmonic balancer thing.Solid alternator pulley or clutched?