I just pulled this off of google. It may help, but the firing order is different. I also do not remember marking the damper for 90 degree turns. The original book tells you 2 full revolutions and then your done. ws
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90 degrees around the balancer (one exactly opposite the factory mark, and two in between these
marks: just get it pretty darned eye-ball close, it doesn't have to be exact.)
·
Remove the valve covers. You may have to remove some accessory brackets in order to do this.
·
Rotate the engine over (either by "bumping" the starter or by inserting a socket and breaker bar
onto the harmonic balancer bolt) until the factory timing mark lines up with "0." Observe the
pushrod for the exhaust valve on the #1 cylinder: if the pushrod moves as you come up on Top
Dead Center, you're on the exhaust stroke, and you need to rotate the crank one more time. If
neither pushrod moves as you come up on the timing mark, you're on the compression stroke and
ready to go.
·
Loosen the adjustment nuts on both the rocker arms for cylinder #1 using a deep socket and a ½"
drive ratchet. One at a time, adjust them as follows:
·
Place the pushrod between you thumb and forefinger of your left hand (or right hand if you're left
handed...). Rotate, or "twirl," the pushrod back and forth between your fingers and notice how
lightly and easily it spins. As you do this, slowly tighten the rocker arm nut. The instant you feel
the "twirl" friction change between your fingers, you are at "0" lash. STOP. Now, notice the
position of your ratchet handle. Tighten the nut exactly ½ turn from your current position. Do the
same to the other rocker arm for #1 (when doing this, make sure that the friction you feel as you
swirl the pushrod is not caused by your ratchet and socket pushing or binding on the rocker arm *
keep things straight and aligned, and watch for false indications caused by your tools). That's it
for #1.
·
Now, here's the trick:
What's the firing order for a GM V8?
1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2
How often does a cylinder fire in a V8?
Every 90 degrees
That means we can now rotate the crankshaft 90 degrees at a time, and go right to the next
cylinder in the firing order for the valve adjustment, with confidence that both of the valves for
that cylinder will be closed and ready to adjust.. So rotate to your next chalk line, and adjust #8 as
described above. Rotate to the next line and adjust #4. After you've rotated the crankshaft twice
over (using the starter and "bumping" is the easiest way), you've finished your valve adjustment!
No oily mess, no worrying about if you missed a valve. Just a nice, simple, structured procedure!
·
Pop your valve covers back on with a fresh set of gaskets, re-install any accessory brackets you've
removed, and start it up with confidence. You now have a correctly adjusted valvetrain that will
operate quietly and with outstanding performance and reliability.: