This is most probably common knowledge amongst all autococker owners, but seeing as i'm a new one i thought i'd share it with ya just in case....
....you might read in a post near by that i've been fiddling with valve springs...
Before i could do this i had to get the valve out! I spent a good 15 minutes scratching my head wondering what the hell that huge hex hole (5/16") was and how to get at it with the valve pin in the way.. .. a quick internet search later told me that it was the Jam nut on the valve and it needed a "special autococker valve tool" in order to be removed! what? .....damn! ....surely you just need a flat edged 5/16" allen key and abit of muscle (to push the valve pin forwards) ...or, hang on, this long nut on the cocking rod looks... yes, it IS 5/16" and its got a hole in the middle where the pin can go...
...so i took the locking grub screw out, then the little rubber shock-absorbing ring off, replaced it with a normal nut (to lock it) put two more on the other end of the cocking rod and locked them together (something to grip with a spanner or mole grips) and sure enough, it slipped over the valve pin and into the hex hole perfectly. After a bit of effort to over come the locktite the jam nut was out!
No "special tool" in sight. This will only work if you have what i think is a standard cocking rod with the elongated 5/16" hex nut on the end.
I don't know if this is by design or what but i'm grateful if it is. Its very clever if it is.....
Anyway, this is most probably old news coz i couldn't find any other posts about people having trouble getting their valves out.... maybe you all have the "special tool" .....
....you might read in a post near by that i've been fiddling with valve springs...
Before i could do this i had to get the valve out! I spent a good 15 minutes scratching my head wondering what the hell that huge hex hole (5/16") was and how to get at it with the valve pin in the way.. .. a quick internet search later told me that it was the Jam nut on the valve and it needed a "special autococker valve tool" in order to be removed! what? .....damn! ....surely you just need a flat edged 5/16" allen key and abit of muscle (to push the valve pin forwards) ...or, hang on, this long nut on the cocking rod looks... yes, it IS 5/16" and its got a hole in the middle where the pin can go...
...so i took the locking grub screw out, then the little rubber shock-absorbing ring off, replaced it with a normal nut (to lock it) put two more on the other end of the cocking rod and locked them together (something to grip with a spanner or mole grips) and sure enough, it slipped over the valve pin and into the hex hole perfectly. After a bit of effort to over come the locktite the jam nut was out!
No "special tool" in sight. This will only work if you have what i think is a standard cocking rod with the elongated 5/16" hex nut on the end.
I don't know if this is by design or what but i'm grateful if it is. Its very clever if it is.....
Anyway, this is most probably old news coz i couldn't find any other posts about people having trouble getting their valves out.... maybe you all have the "special tool" .....