HaulinAshe
Well-known member
Hi Fred!
I disagree with your valve chain comment. At roughly 65k miles the typical FJR valve chain will have enough tolerance to induce a 1.5 to 2.0 degree shift in timing between the intake and exhaust cams. Remember that the chain PULLS from exhaust cam back to intake cam. The resulting retardation of intake timing (relative to exhaust timing) is noticeable to an experienced rider.
The chain will likely never break or wear excessively during the normal 200k-250k lifespan of an FJR. But performance does noticeably suffer from 0k to 65k, not so much 65k to 100k. However, I have seen 100k FJR chains induce a 3.0 degree timing shift.
My point, change the CCT, change the timing chain, enjoy the extra "pep in your step". Or don't worry about it. It WILL last almost forever.
I disagree with your valve chain comment. At roughly 65k miles the typical FJR valve chain will have enough tolerance to induce a 1.5 to 2.0 degree shift in timing between the intake and exhaust cams. Remember that the chain PULLS from exhaust cam back to intake cam. The resulting retardation of intake timing (relative to exhaust timing) is noticeable to an experienced rider.
The chain will likely never break or wear excessively during the normal 200k-250k lifespan of an FJR. But performance does noticeably suffer from 0k to 65k, not so much 65k to 100k. However, I have seen 100k FJR chains induce a 3.0 degree timing shift.
My point, change the CCT, change the timing chain, enjoy the extra "pep in your step". Or don't worry about it. It WILL last almost forever.