First Time to Post
Hello everyone, I have a Can Am Commander 1000 2012 limited. I had a problem with the motor knocking and it died and would not start. After investigating, primary clutch was rattling with peices inside, secondary clutch gears were broken, intake and exhaust side of clutch case piping was plugged with old destroyed belt debris. I pulled the motor to investigate inside the motor.
I found that the bearings between the journal and rod was destroyed, it also scarred the journal. I invested in a new crankshaft, bearings, and rods.
I replaced the timing chains because the bike is 5 years old and they was stretched. I kept all the original piston, rings, jugs, and I didn't fool with the valve train assembly.
Reassembled the motor to spec all except the timing on the camshaft. Let me be clear that the cam gear on this machine has no slotted peace on the back to line up with the cam shaft. The gear has 3 holes for bolting on to the camshaft and it is slick on front and back. It is a stock cam gear with the horizontal marks you are suppose to line up horizontally once you get the camshaft TDC.
So, I put piston 1 TDC, I do not have a camshaft timing tool that is recommended, so I got the cam close as I could with my good eye. Then continued by installing the cam gear and chain and so on. Rotated crankshaft for TDC for #2, repeated the same process for the camshaft, gear, and chain Now, after installing the engine, it will not crank. It acts like it wants to sometimes but doesn't.
Question #1 is there a trick to timing the camshaft with out the timing tool that is in the manual.
Question #2 Do you need to lock the Crankshaft in TDC?
Hello everyone, I have a Can Am Commander 1000 2012 limited. I had a problem with the motor knocking and it died and would not start. After investigating, primary clutch was rattling with peices inside, secondary clutch gears were broken, intake and exhaust side of clutch case piping was plugged with old destroyed belt debris. I pulled the motor to investigate inside the motor.
I found that the bearings between the journal and rod was destroyed, it also scarred the journal. I invested in a new crankshaft, bearings, and rods.
I replaced the timing chains because the bike is 5 years old and they was stretched. I kept all the original piston, rings, jugs, and I didn't fool with the valve train assembly.
Reassembled the motor to spec all except the timing on the camshaft. Let me be clear that the cam gear on this machine has no slotted peace on the back to line up with the cam shaft. The gear has 3 holes for bolting on to the camshaft and it is slick on front and back. It is a stock cam gear with the horizontal marks you are suppose to line up horizontally once you get the camshaft TDC.
So, I put piston 1 TDC, I do not have a camshaft timing tool that is recommended, so I got the cam close as I could with my good eye. Then continued by installing the cam gear and chain and so on. Rotated crankshaft for TDC for #2, repeated the same process for the camshaft, gear, and chain Now, after installing the engine, it will not crank. It acts like it wants to sometimes but doesn't.
Question #1 is there a trick to timing the camshaft with out the timing tool that is in the manual.
Question #2 Do you need to lock the Crankshaft in TDC?