clee wrote::lol: I wasn't confused reading the manual but I am now
Oh for god's sake you lot........
It's a piece of "wee wee" to time up a PRV using the manual. You can dowload it of this website and just follow it and use your brain....
You have three marks on each chain. both chains are identical. All you need to worry about is that the mark(s) on the chain correspond to the mark on the crank and the mark on the cam, as specificed in the book. It doesn't have to be PRECISELY 11 oclock, 5 oclock or 33 minutes and 43 seconds past the hour (which is tea time).
The manual is just a way of making it easy for you. The chains are marked up for you if you buy them from Renault. if not, you can mark them up yourself using tippex and copy the old ones. Follow the book. It really isn't that difficult, and it's only telling you that "if you line things up roughly like this you'll find that you can fit the chain and all the marks will line up." I usually find that I end up rotating the crank very slightly one way or the other in order to pop the cam sprocket on because the cam never wants to stay put *exactly* where you want it (unless you undo all the tappets)
What you have to remember is that once you've done the first bank, the second bank is only 90 or 60 degrees "behind" it and once you've done that one, and rotated the engine, the position of the marks will be totally out of cockerel because the chain is designed to "meet" a different tooth for every link on every rotation so it only repeats its pattern every 100 revolutions or something.
HINT: There's a "check" you can do which is not specifed in the manual. Both chains are fitted with the double mark at the cam and the single mark at the crank. After fitting both chains, rotate the engine and watch as both single marks run up to the cam sprockets and MEET THE MARK THERE. If they don't, you've messed up. If they do, you KNOW you've got it right.
I've done this loads of times. I've cocked up once, and knew about it instantly (how I worked out the check above). It's not like a cam belt where one tooth is a relatively small jump, usually only one one set of valves and evenly across the whole engine. no, the chain setup we have results in one bank being massively out of whack and the thing runs like a bag of nails afterwards. Expect Misfires, flames, and the engine tying to jump out of the engine bay. You don't get valve clash though, luckily!