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This section examines camshaft and drives. The position of the camshaft depends on the design of the engine. It is conveyed in the engine block close to the crankshaft. This is called a push rod or overhead valve system. Or they can be one or two camshaft mounted in the cylinder head, but in both designs, it does much design job drive the valves and the distributor and sometimes, the fuel pump and the oil pump. The camshaft is made of high 00:45 iron alloy or steel and that can be cast or machine. The camrods are ground to the proper shape and position in relation to one another. If the cam is not exactly the required shape, or it becomes worn, there can be impacts, fast valve ware or noisy operation. The bearing surfaces on the camshaft are ground *** and the distributed drive here is machined into the shaft. The cam gloves are the in flamed or induction ***.
The camshaft has a cam for each valve. In some cases, there is an additional cam known as an eccentric to operate the fuel pump. A gear on the camshaft drives the ignition distributor and often, an oil pump.
In modern engines, the push rod system is being replaced by the simpler overhead camshaft arrangement. The overhead camshaft is located in the cylinder head. They can be one or two camshafts.
Let us look at a single overhead camshaft arrangement. Single overhead camshafts can use rocker arms. The cam can lift one in if they rock around or it can press down on the rock around. On double overhead camshaft systems, the most common arrangement is to use a bucket tappet or lifter. It operates in a guide that protects the valve against the side thrusts, which it would receive if the cam operated directly against the valve. The adjustment of valve clearance is usually done by changing accurately machine spaces. Spaces are available in a range of thicknesses and they exchange to obtain the correct clearance.
Some overhead cam engines use a hydraulic lash adjuster. To reduce lashing the valve from prying. They have zero clearance at the valve stem so there is no need for tappet adjustment. It can be put in the valve end of the rock around. Like the hydraulic valve in there, it has a body with plunger held against the valve stem by a spring. Oil supplied to the adjuster keeps the plunger in contact with the valve and eliminates lash. Lash adjusters can be put in the cylinder head at the end of the rock around. The lash adjusters are stationery and have a *** from the end pf the rock around. The plunger in the adjuster holds the rocker up against the cam. In the lash adjuster inside the bucket tappet, the plunger’s hydraulic action holds the bucket body against the cam on the camshaft and also against the tip of the valve stem so that there is zero clearance.
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