I did it!
I did it!
piece of p iss, all too easy... really, it was no harder than any other engine i've worked on. (i'am excited, cant you tell.)
So thinking way ahead of you Steve, at lunch time to day I brought a PVC joiner, its for 20mm pipe and has internal thread one end for tap etc, (nice thick wall)
made a new special tool and put it in place.
now got out the piece of timber, one end it the frame the other i tied down with a rachet strap. used the crashbar as it was handy.
keepers came out with tweezers, relased the wood , took spring and all out.
Now what was difficult, was to get the old seal out, it was so dry and hard that i really had to mangle it up with the long noses before getting it out with a deft heave.
new seal in , pushed down with a long reach socket till it clicked into place, oiled it first.
rerigged the wood and I dipped the collets in grease and stuck them to the valve.
undid the spanner, back the pressure off, pull out the rope, I jiggled the valve with the wood and special tool to make sure things were seated.
put the bucket back in and moved on to next cylinder.
being on the outside got a better shot of installing keepers, if you compress the spring just enough it really isnt hard at all. (for me at least)
stuck on with grease
So there was wasnt really any drama, and really putting the keepers was no harder than any other head, ive done. actually access was'nt too bad at all.
So seals are in, leaving the mundane reassembly of cams and shim adjustments etc for another day.