Thought I would make a reply to this old thread in case it could
help anyone out in the future as I gained
help from reading these replies myself however still came across hurdles. This won’t be an in-depth
guide but I will try to put as much info as possible
I have just taken in this job on my driveway on a 2014 1.2 TSI
Ibiza 6J but I presume it will be identical on any car with the CBZB engine. Although fairly mechanically minded and have swapped engines, rebuilt gearboxes etc this is my first timing chain and I was fairly nervous.
Firstly, be sure before you start the job which chain you have. There are two different types, one which has been superseded by a newer design for better reliability however this does require a new crankshaft and camshaft sprocket and tensioner.
https://ibb.co/b5jqwVQS
https://ibb.co/35tnQHdt
(The newer design is the one with the alternating plates on the chain, and the older one has 2 plates, one plate, 2 plates etc). I plugged my reg into GSF and purchased a FEBI kit which I assumed would work, however it came with the wrong (old) chain.
I therefore purchased the newer chain etc and cracked on.
It was all going fairly swimmingly, pulled the timing cover off prising off the horrific job the last bloke did and cleaning up all the extra silicone they left, got the engine locked in TDC and the cam locked, this is where my first piece of advice would be.
https://ibb.co/fYMwp5Vz
https://ibb.co/wZRV323c
Do NOT use the cheap timing tools. I’m always one for saving money where possible and buying the eBay/amazon Chinese reps of the proper brand however in this instance, don’t. Whilst removing the camshaft pulley even whilst counter holding with the correct tool the small amount of torque that was applied to it whilst removing sheered the thing off in the cam not once but twice (more fool me). After 2 failed attempts with the Amazon ones I purchased this laser one for £50 or so and the difference in material is night and day. Even the fitment into the cam slots felt nicer.
Next was removing the crankshaft pulley, no matter how hard I tried with a strong impact, with a counter hold tool and breaker bar I could not slack it off. I ended up using the trick of placing a breaker bar on it, jamming it up against the chassis and cranking the key. It whizzed right off. I then replaced the bolt finger tight so that my puller had something to pull from and not damage the crankshaft. I used a gear puller around the crankshaft sprocket and it came off a breeze.
This is where the next issue came about. When replacing the crankshaft sprocket, I placed it in the oven for 20-30 minutes at 200°c with the hope of expanding it enough to just slide on, as I have seen in videos. I have picked it up using mole grips and ran outside to slide it on and it got half way on before getting stuck. I have then begun using a different technique I’ve seen in another
video where someone uses a length of pipe wider than the crankshaft but thin enough to touch the sprocket and the old crank bolt to wind it down. I have begun to wind it down until calamity… the crankshaft bolt becomes loose. I had stripped the threads in the crankshaft , it seems as though I only had a few threads engaged when I was putting them under immense stress by pushing a now cool friction fit sprocket onto the crankshaft. Needless to say I was pulling my hair out for the next few days whilst figuring out what to do. Genuinely considering replacing the entire engine if I needed to get the crank reconditioned, luckily a long M14 tap fixed it up and I was back at it.
I assumed the time it took for me to run the 50 foot from my oven to the car the sprocket contracted, therefore I purchased a MAPP torch of eBay for £40. Literally 10-20 seconds of this directed at the inner portion of the sprocket and it slid all the way on and seated nicely.
Now onto reassembly. Everything was going swimmingly up until it came to torquing the camshaft back up with the new chain installed. After checking both crank and cam are locked properly
https://ibb.co/GrpmgNz
https://ibb.co/v4nW1h61
I have begun the sequence of tightening the camshaft sprocket using the correct counter hold tool. I have had to do this about 3-4 times because after after completing the sequence and removing the tools, after rotating the engine twice, the camshaft would never quite lineup and would be a few teeth out. What I realised is that when I was counter-holding the crankshaft sprocket, I was putting just enough pressure on it slightly before I torqued the bolt down causing the engine to rotate ever so slightly backwards (away from the crankshaft locking tool) and then would torque the pulley down onto the shaft locking it slightly out of time. I presume this was due to my fear of snapping my new £50 laser cam lock after the Amazon debacle. After figuring this out, I ensured that I begun tightening the bolt ever slightly before I begun the counter hold pressure.
After that, the engine rotated twice and both crank lock and cam lock lined up perfectly. ( I had to re-check about 5 other times before buttoning up the timing cover due to being paranoid it would skip timing again.
I doused the new chain and sprockets in 5w-30 hoping to negate the horrible noise on start up, which didn’t
help much. It still took a good 45 seconds of running before it quietened down to the usual tick of the 1.2 CBZB engine.
Hope this helps someone