cookie monster wrote:
If i spin the crank 1 revolution, it will align the cam timing mark, but the engine will not be on TDC on #1 compression stroke.
Cookie Monster
I think you are trying to say, the valves are in the wrong order?
Currently in the picture shown the exhaust valve should be closed or almost closed. As you turn the crank the, intake valve will open (or already be slightly open), #1 piston will move down, then intake valve will close and #1 piston will move up on the compression stroke.
Piston #4 should be fully closed currently at ignition point etc.
From your original post
cookie monster wrote:
If i spin the crank 1 revolution, it will align the cam timing mark, but the engine will not be on TDC on #1 compression stroke.
at camshaft 180 out of sync, It definitely appears to be ready for ignition on cylinder #1. Piston 4 is finishing the exhaust stroke, and beginning the intake stroke.
180 degree camshaft rotation will align piston 4 with TDC ignition point.
This reminds me of the barina engine my friend and I are putting in his sierra. After putting in an unkown make/model sierra camshaft (he sold his engine before realising he needed the camshaft), trying to gap the tappets guided by the manual was wrong, because after a 180 degree rotation of the camshaft the gaps on cyl 1 was much bigger, than it should have been.
Barina engine is BA, pulley/sprocket is BA, the camshaft is unknown. I would suspect the BA, and A camshafts have the little notch for the sprocket 180 degrees different.
EDIT: will go and confirm this hypothesis, will get back to you tonight. But it certainly helps explain both of our issues.