01-16-2011 | #1 | |
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Prather, CA
Posts: 809
|
Mystery of the timing chain failure...
Me and Dynomite have been exchanging PM's discussing the possible reasons for the timing chain breaking in my '90 ZR-1 (as well as things regarding reinstalling his dashboard).
I'm pasting his reply here in a new thread, since having further discussion in my first restoration thread would just be too messy. Anyway here's what he posted at the end of that thread: Quote:
__________________
[IMG]http://i13.photobucket.com/albums/a292/bdw18_123/_zr1netforumsigphoto.jpg[/IMG][B] 1990 Corvette ZR-1 [/B][I] White/Flame Red, #2299, mostly stock, 144K miles.[/I] -Cams timed to the '93-'95 405HP LT5 stock timing. -IAT sensor relocated to below front bumper. -Haibeck hoops installed in airduct. -OBX cat-back exhaust. [COLOR=DarkRed][B](SOLD - December 2012 [/B][/COLOR][COLOR=DarkRed][B]:hello:)[/B][/COLOR] 1993 Corvette Coupe Black/Black, 6-speed (SOLD - October 2009 :hello:) Last edited by bdw18_123; 01-16-2011 at 05:38 PM. |
|
01-16-2011 | #2 |
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Prather, CA
Posts: 809
|
Re: Mystery of the timing chain failure...
First, I will post the story here that I told Cliff in PM's about why I believe the timing chain breakage was due to excessive driving with a bad misfire:
My ZR-1 currently has 139,376 miles on it, which is what it had when I bought it. I'm almost positive that the timing chain breakage was caused by the previous owner driving it for too long with a bad misfire condition. Here's why I say that: I had lent my ECM awhile back to tccrabs to help him with some troubleshooting he was doing on his '90 Z. After trying my ECM in his car, he said it made his car run with a bad misfire. Once he put his ECM back in, the misfire went away. At the time, he had already planned to make a trip to see Jeff Flint (jeffvette), so he took my ECM with him and they tried driving Jeff's ZR-1 with my ECM. Same results, bad misfire. So it is a good thing I lent my ECM to Tom or I'd have been tearing my hair out trying to chase down a misfire once I had the Z together and running. So that confirmed that the ECM that came with my Z was bad. The ECM had already been replaced at least once before, back in December 21, 2001 according to the Carfax report which showed a "Failed Emissions" with 53,657 miles on the car, then on the same day it said "computer system repaired", then a "Passed Emissions" after that. That original ECM was undoubtedly causing similar type of misfire which caused the car to fail smog. The sticker that was on the ECM that came with my Z said "remanufactured" on it. I have a good ECM now though, I bought a known good original used one from Sgreg, it was out of a 30 something thousand mile Z I think. Paid $275 for it, then sold my bad ECM to Haibeck for $100, so I really only paid $175 for it. Anyway, back to the story. So the last entry on the Carfax report is on January 24, 2008 which says "Failed Emissions" at 133,074 miles. The bad ECM that was in the car when I bought it is the most likely reason for failing smog. He bought new injectors in October of 2008, which tells me he was probably trying to fix the misfire problem. Now notice the mileage at the time of the last failed smog - 133,074 miles. The mileage now is 139,376 miles. Which means it is possible that the previous owner drove this Z for another 6,302 miles with a bad misfire condition! If that's true (and it most likely is), no wonder the timing chain broke! Tom Crab is actually the one that suggested that driving it with a misfire could be the cause of the chain breaking and given what I've just said above, it makes sense.
__________________
[IMG]http://i13.photobucket.com/albums/a292/bdw18_123/_zr1netforumsigphoto.jpg[/IMG][B] 1990 Corvette ZR-1 [/B][I] White/Flame Red, #2299, mostly stock, 144K miles.[/I] -Cams timed to the '93-'95 405HP LT5 stock timing. -IAT sensor relocated to below front bumper. -Haibeck hoops installed in airduct. -OBX cat-back exhaust. [COLOR=DarkRed][B](SOLD - December 2012 [/B][/COLOR][COLOR=DarkRed][B]:hello:)[/B][/COLOR] 1993 Corvette Coupe Black/Black, 6-speed (SOLD - October 2009 :hello:) |
01-16-2011 | #3 |
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Prather, CA
Posts: 809
|
Re: Mystery of the timing chain failure...
Now, the fact that the rollers of the broken chain are only worn near the area of the break tells me that one section of the chain was subjected to more force than the rest of the chain. More than likely the misfire was happening only on that side (driver's side) of the engine. And if the same cylinder or maybe several cylinders were misfiring all the time, I could see how the same section of chain would be continually subjected to a yanking/jerking motion. Probably the leading section of chain going around one of the camshaft sprockets, since that is the tightest radius that those chains go around.
So as that section of the chain comes around then gets yanked on in that same section as the misfire occurs. Which would continue to happened with continued driving, causing eventual failure. tccrab is the one that first suggested to me (in PM's) that this misfire could have caused the chain failure after experiencing the misfire in his car that my ECM caused. Maybe you can describe in more detail how bad the misfire was, Tom? And if it seemed like a random misfire or continually on the same cylinder or set of cylinders? Any insight any of you into this have is welcomed!
__________________
[IMG]http://i13.photobucket.com/albums/a292/bdw18_123/_zr1netforumsigphoto.jpg[/IMG][B] 1990 Corvette ZR-1 [/B][I] White/Flame Red, #2299, mostly stock, 144K miles.[/I] -Cams timed to the '93-'95 405HP LT5 stock timing. -IAT sensor relocated to below front bumper. -Haibeck hoops installed in airduct. -OBX cat-back exhaust. [COLOR=DarkRed][B](SOLD - December 2012 [/B][/COLOR][COLOR=DarkRed][B]:hello:)[/B][/COLOR] 1993 Corvette Coupe Black/Black, 6-speed (SOLD - October 2009 :hello:) Last edited by bdw18_123; 01-16-2011 at 06:03 PM. |
01-16-2011 | #4 |
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Arcadia,OK
Posts: 3,394
|
Re: Mystery of the timing chain failure...
Isn't the LH secondary chain the long chain? The idler sprocket is off center to the RH side, i.e. closer th the RH bank.
__________________
Jerry Downey JERRYS LT5 GASKETS & PARTS http://www.jerrysgaskets.com 1994 ZR-1, Black/Black, Lingenfelter Aerobody, 416cu in, 3.91 gears, coil-over susp, Brembo brakes, etc. 2016 Black-Red, 3LT-Z51 Auto 8-speed. |
01-16-2011 | #5 |
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Arcadia,OK
Posts: 3,394
|
Re: Mystery of the timing chain failure...
You're funny! You've caught way more of my mistakes than I ever will of yours my friend.
Great job on the analysis of the chain as it relates to miss impulse load. I like that long hair physics stuff. The engineer in you is showing. Although that "south side with the Zee facing west" is a little oblique! LOL
__________________
Jerry Downey JERRYS LT5 GASKETS & PARTS http://www.jerrysgaskets.com 1994 ZR-1, Black/Black, Lingenfelter Aerobody, 416cu in, 3.91 gears, coil-over susp, Brembo brakes, etc. 2016 Black-Red, 3LT-Z51 Auto 8-speed. |
01-16-2011 | #6 |
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Crystal Lake, IL
Posts: 7,194
|
Re: Mystery of the timing chain failure...
Is it possible the heads have been milled too far? Tensioners would allow slack and chains would whip at high RPM.....might be worth checking, I know I need to check on my heads.
__________________
LGAFF 90 #966-150K miles-sold 92 #234-sold 1987 Callaway TT #17 1991 ZR-1 #1359 |
03-06-2012 | #7 |
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Prather, CA
Posts: 809
|
Re: Mystery of the timing chain failure...
Since Cliff has this thread linked to in his -Solutions- document, I thought I would repost this bit of info from my restore thread since this one kind of ends with no apparent resolution.
It seems very likely that the larger piece of plastic in the picture below (which is from the small wear-strip on the underside of the driver's side cam cover) is a big part of the string of events that led to the failure of the driver's side chain in my '90 ZR-1. The fact that the P.O. drove the car for so long with a misfire probably contributed to the failure, but I don't know how big of a factor that was. Of course, that leads us to the next question which is, why did the wear strip on that side come off? It may have just become brittle after nearly 140K miles, I don't know. Below is the repost: I also found some other "goodies" clustered underneath the oil suction tube. The screen on it prevented the pieces from being sucked up to the top of the engine. The "goodies" turned out to be more bits of broken chain rollers and a couple pieces of the plastic wear strip. I think the big plastic piece on the left in the picture may be the actual cause of the chain breaking. It looks like a piece of the cam cover wear strip that went between the chain and one of the sprockets (either the cam sprockets or the idler sprocket) when the engine was running. It may have even stayed on the sprocket it was on for several revolutions which would have put a lot of extra stress on the chain in that one spot, causing it to weaken and break.
__________________
[IMG]http://i13.photobucket.com/albums/a292/bdw18_123/_zr1netforumsigphoto.jpg[/IMG][B] 1990 Corvette ZR-1 [/B][I] White/Flame Red, #2299, mostly stock, 144K miles.[/I] -Cams timed to the '93-'95 405HP LT5 stock timing. -IAT sensor relocated to below front bumper. -Haibeck hoops installed in airduct. -OBX cat-back exhaust. [COLOR=DarkRed][B](SOLD - December 2012 [/B][/COLOR][COLOR=DarkRed][B]:hello:)[/B][/COLOR] 1993 Corvette Coupe Black/Black, 6-speed (SOLD - October 2009 :hello:) |
03-06-2012 | #8 |
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Peoria, AZ
Posts: 9,155
|
Re: Mystery of the timing chain failure...
Good post up
__________________
GOLDCYLON - 91 ZR-1 #2014 GOLDCYLON - 90 ZR-1 #2794, 4L60e (Formerly Schrade's) GOLDCYLON - 11 CTS-V Arizona State Director 91 WHITE/BLACK #2014. 380 P&P&PCed,Ported Heads, Jeal Long tubes, Corsa Exhaust/FIKSE FM-5s /LED TLs, LED Headlights, Front Wilwood 6 piston narrowlite calipers and rear Wilwood caliper street shop mod,CNCed Coolant Pipes,TPI Cvr,Filter cover,Stainless Bolts, DRM/DOM PROM /ZFDOC mod build #102,DRLs,BMAD with stainless Debris Screen,Coplan Air Blaster, Pioneer APP Radio 4,Brey-Krause HB,Sub Bar,Fire extinguisher seat mount,DRM Coilovers,LEDs everywhere,Compass mirror (orange),V1 DIC hidden display, Homelink sun visor, Carbon Fiber top x3 and APSIS Carbon Fiber interior, APSIS CF Steering Wheel/NAPA Leather, Banski trailing arms, Guldstrand front suspension,urethane bushings from Prothane (total suspension) ZFDoc drive shaft safety loop, raptor shift light (orange),AO engineering louver front plate, Console seat cushion, 96CE seats with black custom Sheepskins, ss billet catch can,Viper remote entry/alarm,Cragar Rear Louvers,LED side louver lights, Dewitts Radiator with SPAL fans and a Woods 160 T-Stat 90 RED/BLACK #2794. 4L60e Automatic Stage V by RPM Transmission, TCI Dedicated TCM, OBX Stainless Headers, Corsa Exhaust, SAN Secondaries and Haibeck PROM, Exotic Muscle Coil overs, LED Interior Lights, LED Tail Lights, LED Headlights, 94 Sport seats with black custom Sheepskins , Cragar rear louvers, GS Front calipers, Banski Trailing arms, APSIS Carbon Fiber steering wheel, Front and Rear Baer Eradispeeds, DRLs, Guldstrand front suspension,urethane bushings from Prothane (total suspension), Dewitt's Raditor with Dual SPAL fans and a Haibeck 170 T-Stat 11 RED/GREY CTS-V |
03-07-2012 | #9 |
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: San Marcos CA
Posts: 1,802
|
Re: Mystery of the timing chain failure...
The whole firing order harmonics had me intrigued until Cliff proved the sprocket tooth count didn't have a clean common denominator and the firing pulses reacted to different parts of the chain on any given rotational cycle.
the wear guide falling off and jamming up the works seems like the most likely cause. |
03-07-2012 | #10 |
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Kalamazoo MI
Posts: 1,753
|
Re: Mystery of the timing chain failure...
This is not the first time that I have seen this failure of the upper chain guide wear strip!
I was removing my cam covers for a powdercoating job and I didn't have a problem that I knew of, Until I got the cam cover off and I flipped it over and saw that the upper chain guide in the cam cover was gone the chain had been rubbing on the steel backplate. I found all of the wear strip but damn it looks like yours got in the chain and it could have been the culprit!
__________________
JOHNNY P Currently own 90 ZR-1 #845 DRM 500 engine package 90 #226 Parts car Hit me up if you need anything. Last edited by phrogs; 03-07-2012 at 02:42 AM. |
|
|