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                                               On’
                                             Tech Corner-continued


       your feeler gauge. If it has changed from the light drag you felt originally, loosen the nut and start over again.
       Continue until the nut is tight and you’re certain that the clearance is as specified, then move on to the next one.

       Rotate the engine with the fan blade and watch valve #2. When it is fully open, and seen to just begin to come
       up (close), you’ll know that it’s time to adjust valve #7 (2+7=9). Continue working your way toward the rear of
       the engine, watching each successive valve open fully, and adjusting the valve whose number added to the open
       one adds up to 9. When you reach the rear of the engine, valve #8 is open and you’ve adjusted #1, all of your
       valves will have been adjusted, and the job is done.

       As I mentioned before, this “Rule of 9” works on the Triumph TR2-4A engines, but it doesn’t necessarily work
       for every engine, or the 6-cylinder TR engines. For that reason, I prefer to adjust valves on a cylinder by cylinder
       basis, so that I know what’s going on with the camshaft of any engine I might be working on.


                                                                                       Take  a  look  at  figure  #3.
                                                                                       Here  is  a  Triumph  TR4
                                                                                       engine  with  the  rocker
                                                                                       cover  removed.  We  know
                                                                                       that  there  is  an  intake  and
                                                                                       exhaust  valve  for  each
                                                                                       cylinder,  and  you  can  see
                                                                                       that they are positioned on
                                                                                       either side of the spark plug
                                                                                       hole. The first two belong to
                                                                                       cylinder #1, the second two
                                                                                       are for cylinder #2, and so
                                                                                       on.  Having  a  little  bit  of
                                                                                       knowledge  of  the  4-cycle
                                                                                       engine process, I know that
                                                                                       the  intake  valve  is  open
                                                                                       during  the  intake  stroke,
       and the exhaust valve is open during the exhaust stroke, and both valves should be closed during the compression
       and power strokes. But which valve is which, and how do we know which stroke any particular cylinder might
       be on? First, let’s decide which valve is which. This is pretty simple to do with the rocker cover removed. Look
       at the opposite side of the head in figure #3, and you can follow the intake manifold runners from the carburetors
       to the intake valve for each cylinder. You can also see that the exhaust manifold lines up with a valve for each
       cylinder, so that would be the exhaust valve! Now if you rotate the engine slowly with the fan blade just as it
       was done with the “Rule of 9” method above, you can watch each valve open and know whether the cylinder
       you’re watching is in the intake or exhaust stroke. By design, there is a small area between the exhaust and
       intake strokes where the exhaust valve is still closing and the intake valve is starting to open, so I adjust the
       valves of each individual cylinder as follows: When the intake valve starts to come up (close), adjust the exhaust
       valve for that cylinder. There’s no way that the exhaust valve is still open toward the end of the intake stroke,
       and the cylinder has to go through the compression and power strokes before it starts to open again. When the
       exhaust valve just starts to go down (open), adjust the intake valve, confident that the full exhaust stroke stands
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