valve adjustment time coming soon
#1
valve adjustment time coming soon
Has anyone done their valve adjustments on their ZX11? I'm scheduling mine during the next oil change at 10,000 miles. I'm at 7000 now but should hit 10k in a few weeks. Any advice will be appreciated. Are there any shim kits recommended over others?
#2
I did one a few months ago. The manual says to pull the carbs. I just undid the throttle cables at the throttle grip and made some room over the engine by pulling them up. As for shims, I would first check to see what clearance you have, then with a micrometer, I would measure the shim. Then, looking at the manual's table see which shim will replace the one that you have. I would also log all the measurements and shims that you have and the ones that you use. Some of the ones you have in the bike might be used on another valve so its important to know what each one measures out to be. Some of the shims will have a size stamped on them, others won't. Then I would go to a dealer that is willing to sell you shims from their inventory.
#4
Yes, using your mics, you can reuse some of the shims. However, one shim may cost $7/each. Or you can get the kit for around $75 if you plan on working on other models as well. Keep a good log of the sizes used and measured.
#5
Good idea on using a micrometer. Didn't think about that. I got the bike in April so this will be my first valve adjustment. I have 0 shims to start off with so I figured I'd purchase a shim kit that comes with 3 of each size. Saw one on Ebay for ~$72.
Out of curiosity, do ZX11's typically need lots of shims replaced every time?
The newer, shim under bucket designs, need less frequent changes but that's due to the design. Of course it takes more work/time having to remove the cams. I keep hearing Honda's will need slight adjustments the first time around then typically stay within spec for 50,000 - 100,000 miles.
Out of curiosity, do ZX11's typically need lots of shims replaced every time?
The newer, shim under bucket designs, need less frequent changes but that's due to the design. Of course it takes more work/time having to remove the cams. I keep hearing Honda's will need slight adjustments the first time around then typically stay within spec for 50,000 - 100,000 miles.
#6
I like the kit but you still need to keep things organized, and measured. (since I own more than one ninja or kawi). Normally, maybe one or two shims really need swapped out, but at dealer costs, felt like I got raped the first time around. Then again, you are pretty much good to go after that. Most people sell their bikes before the next valve adjustment.
#10
Congrats. Piece of mind knowing that things are up to spec. All bolts, oil lines, gaskets, the CCT adjustment are all up to standards. Did you replace the cam guide bolts and CCT bolts with new ones? I found that stock bolts are junk and stretch too much, so I end up replacing them with new bolts.