PCX Valve Adjustment
Moderator: Modsquad
PCX Valve Adjustment
When has everyone been getting their valves adjusted?
Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
From new till 10,000 miles mine was dealer serviced.
No idea whether the dealer actually did adjust them.
The scooter now has 12,500 miles on and I may take a look at the valve clearances at 15,000 miles when its due for a new drive belt and oil change.
No idea whether the dealer actually did adjust them.
The scooter now has 12,500 miles on and I may take a look at the valve clearances at 15,000 miles when its due for a new drive belt and oil change.
Four decades on two wheels has taught me nothing, all advice given is guaranteed to be wrong
Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
I checked mine at 5000 miles. Had it dealer serviced at 600 and 2500 miles.
I don't think I will check them now until 15000 miles as they were on the tighter side of the tolerances when I checked.
I don't think I will check them now until 15000 miles as they were on the tighter side of the tolerances when I checked.

Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
I have 1200 miles on my PcX 150 and have not yet brought it in for first service. I dont hear any valve noise and have not had any performance issues. should i wait longer maybe to 1500 or 2000 miles? what is your guys opinions?
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Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
Spleege wrote:I have 1200 miles on my PcX 150 and have not yet brought it in for first service. I dont hear any valve noise and have not had any performance issues. should i wait longer maybe to 1500 or 2000 miles? what is your guys opinions?
Have you changed the oil in it
- Alibally
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PCX Valve Adjustment
Ditto. It's important to change the oil and clean out the screen filter way before 1200 miles. Should be done at half that.qed wrote:Spleege wrote:I have 1200 miles on my PcX 150 and have not yet brought it in for first service. I dont hear any valve noise and have not had any performance issues. should i wait longer maybe to 1500 or 2000 miles? what is your guys opinions?
Have you changed the oil in it

Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
considering this is a liquid cooled motor with a rev limiter I just wasn't worried. I didn't waste the money bringing it to a dealer to have a service done, have them break all the plastic tabs and not tell me. I bought the service manual. After about 2 hours of removing plastic i finally got to the head, popped it off and as i suspected the valves were exactly at factory settings. .004 intake and .009 at exhaust. additionally the oil was pristine and a light brown. anyone getting paranoid about late services, forget about it. this motor is rock solid. I'm 230, 6'3" and this thing cooks along on flat ground at the rev limit of about 65. great bike. I could not believe all the evap lines and smog crap on this bike. well i do live in california, unfortunately.
Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
I saw and rode a Pcx 125 last night that had done 28000km and no valve adjustments in the last 24000km,oil servicing every 5000km. It ran and felt like brand new still...Spleege wrote:considering this is a liquid cooled motor with a rev limiter I just wasn't worried. I didn't waste the money bringing it to a dealer to have a service done, have them break all the plastic tabs and not tell me. I bought the service manual. After about 2 hours of removing plastic i finally got to the head, popped it off and as i suspected the valves were exactly at factory settings. .004 intake and .009 at exhaust. additionally the oil was pristine and a light brown. anyone getting paranoid about late services, forget about it. this motor is rock solid. I'm 230, 6'3" and this thing cooks along on flat ground at the rev limit of about 65. great bike. I could not believe all the evap lines and smog crap on this bike. well i do live in california, unfortunately.
Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
We are just putting our PCX back together after doing our first valve check at about 1200+ miles. It was out of spec on the intake at .006 and the exhaust was good at .009 so we only had to tighten the intake. I'm glad that we finally checked as I wouldn't want to be running it much out of spec, but I suspect that the schedule listed in the manual has an abundance of caution and I'm comfortable stretching the guidelines some.
Many thanks to Eddie for the tutorial and advice. We have the service manual, but it was nice to have a second resource to double check a few times.
Many thanks to Eddie for the tutorial and advice. We have the service manual, but it was nice to have a second resource to double check a few times.
2011 Honda PCX, 2007 Suzuki Burgman 400
2 Honda Civics, 5 bicycles and 1 more on order
2 Honda Civics, 5 bicycles and 1 more on order
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Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
You're very welcome! Glad it has been a good tool for people to use.
Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
I agree
Spleege wrote:considering this is a liquid cooled motor with a rev limiter I just wasn't worried. I didn't waste the money bringing it to a dealer to have a service done, have them break all the plastic tabs and not tell me. I bought the service manual. After about 2 hours of removing plastic i finally got to the head, popped it off and as i suspected the valves were exactly at factory settings. .004 intake and .009 at exhaust. additionally the oil was pristine and a light brown. anyone getting paranoid about late services, forget about it. this motor is rock solid. I'm 230, 6'3" and this thing cooks along on flat ground at the rev limit of about 65. great bike. I could not believe all the evap lines and smog crap on this bike. well i do live in california, unfortunately.

- OriginalRocket
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Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
7250 miles, and my third valve check. They are exactly where I placed them at my second valve check at 3500 miles. Both valves were tight on the 600 and 3500 mile check. Now they haven't moved in 4000 miles.
My next vavle check will be 15000 miles, when I replace the belt.
Question for everyone. Does the PCX valves tend to get tight, or open the gap as the valves wear and fall out of spec.?
My next vavle check will be 15000 miles, when I replace the belt.
Question for everyone. Does the PCX valves tend to get tight, or open the gap as the valves wear and fall out of spec.?
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Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
There's no good answer... Most people say valves get tighter as they wear, I've experienced the opposite. YMMV.
Currently ride: Nothing right now - mostly mountain biking with my boys until they're old enough to ride
Previously rides: 2011 Honda PCX 125, 2005 V-Strom DL650, 1974 Vespa Ciao, 2011 Honda PCX 170 (tons of mods - takegawa 170cc big bore kit, gears, etc), 1996 Honda Nighthawk 250, 1987 Honda Spree, 2000 KTM 125SX, 2003 Honda Silverwing, 2007 Genuine Buddy 125, 1998 Honda PC800, 2008 Buddy 125 (white), 2008 Buddy 125 (red), 2001 Honda Reflex, 1987 Honda Elite, 1988 Honda Spree, 2007 Yamaha Vino, 2007 Honda Metro, 2x 125cc pure-chinesium dirt bikes

Previously rides: 2011 Honda PCX 125, 2005 V-Strom DL650, 1974 Vespa Ciao, 2011 Honda PCX 170 (tons of mods - takegawa 170cc big bore kit, gears, etc), 1996 Honda Nighthawk 250, 1987 Honda Spree, 2000 KTM 125SX, 2003 Honda Silverwing, 2007 Genuine Buddy 125, 1998 Honda PC800, 2008 Buddy 125 (white), 2008 Buddy 125 (red), 2001 Honda Reflex, 1987 Honda Elite, 1988 Honda Spree, 2007 Yamaha Vino, 2007 Honda Metro, 2x 125cc pure-chinesium dirt bikes
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Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
There's a lot of threads where members try to convince each other the valves don't need adjustment. They do, here's why:
Honda builds reliable, efficient, quiet engines. To get the most from them they need to be within specifications, and Honda clearly lays out what needs to be adjusted and when. With Honda, running an engine "a little out of spec" makes them run like most other engines, darn fine. HOWEVER, putting them dead-center of spec. or "a little toward the logical side" makes them run "perfect," meaning way better than other engines (and they tend to remain running that way pretty much forever...).
With valves, running them toward the loose side of center of spec. is better. Today's valves tend to not wear much as long as the oil is changed regularly, so they tend not to loosen up over time from wear. Carbon buildup is usually the dominating factor, actually tightening (reducing) the valve clearance, so running looser makes sense (vs tighter). Also, a valve running way too tight (meaning having little to no valve lash causing the valve to open early) can burn the valve and seat, whereas running loose (lots of lash causing the valve to be open a shorter duration) will result in a slight loss of power and some chatter (the saying used to be "tappy tappets are happy tappets)--although slapping the cam and valve stem (which makes that tapping sound) isn't good, it's better to get some audible warning to adjust the valves (tapping from too much lash) than melt down the engine from too little valve lash. Note I'm saying keep the valve lash within specifications, and instead of "exactly between the minimum and maximum specs." perhaps adjust between center and the maximim spec.
So to use simple numbers,
if the lash spec was between 0.001 and 0.010 (which it's not, and the intake and exhaust valves each have different specs.)
If the lash loosened up over time (instead of tightening) this would probably be due to wear (if it is not a loose valve stem nut) and I'd be sending the oil in for testing to see what is wearing and putting metal particulates in the oil, because there's probably some sort of engine casting chip that broke off and is blocking an oil passage.
Again, that's an example and not the actual values.
Honda builds reliable, efficient, quiet engines. To get the most from them they need to be within specifications, and Honda clearly lays out what needs to be adjusted and when. With Honda, running an engine "a little out of spec" makes them run like most other engines, darn fine. HOWEVER, putting them dead-center of spec. or "a little toward the logical side" makes them run "perfect," meaning way better than other engines (and they tend to remain running that way pretty much forever...).
With valves, running them toward the loose side of center of spec. is better. Today's valves tend to not wear much as long as the oil is changed regularly, so they tend not to loosen up over time from wear. Carbon buildup is usually the dominating factor, actually tightening (reducing) the valve clearance, so running looser makes sense (vs tighter). Also, a valve running way too tight (meaning having little to no valve lash causing the valve to open early) can burn the valve and seat, whereas running loose (lots of lash causing the valve to be open a shorter duration) will result in a slight loss of power and some chatter (the saying used to be "tappy tappets are happy tappets)--although slapping the cam and valve stem (which makes that tapping sound) isn't good, it's better to get some audible warning to adjust the valves (tapping from too much lash) than melt down the engine from too little valve lash. Note I'm saying keep the valve lash within specifications, and instead of "exactly between the minimum and maximum specs." perhaps adjust between center and the maximim spec.
So to use simple numbers,
if the lash spec was between 0.001 and 0.010 (which it's not, and the intake and exhaust valves each have different specs.)
- "tight" or "opening early" would be 0.001
- "loose" or "short duration" would be 0.010
- the midpoint would be 0.005
- and I would set the lash between 0.007 and 0.008.
If the lash loosened up over time (instead of tightening) this would probably be due to wear (if it is not a loose valve stem nut) and I'd be sending the oil in for testing to see what is wearing and putting metal particulates in the oil, because there's probably some sort of engine casting chip that broke off and is blocking an oil passage.
Again, that's an example and not the actual values.
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Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
Oh God not again.
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Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
I've got somewhere around 2500 miles on my 2017 and haven't adjusted my valves yet. They have a little bit of noise as they did new. A noisy valve means the valves are closing because there is clearance. Too much clearance (can sound louder or more metal on metal) effects performance by not allowing the valves to open enough thus starving the engine for fuel/air or to allow exhaust to vent in a timely fashion.
If they start to get quieter or something gets out of character I'll pull the panels and check them. I think the U.K. manual calls for valve maintenance every 4K miles if I'm not mistaken. My U.S. manual indicates every 2500 or something. Go figure. . .. The performance is consistent so far. I check my oil and coolant levels and don't run the Bejeezus out of it.
If they start to get quieter or something gets out of character I'll pull the panels and check them. I think the U.K. manual calls for valve maintenance every 4K miles if I'm not mistaken. My U.S. manual indicates every 2500 or something. Go figure. . .. The performance is consistent so far. I check my oil and coolant levels and don't run the Bejeezus out of it.

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Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
PCX150Rider wrote:I've got somewhere around 2500 miles on my 2017 and haven't adjusted my valves yet. They have a little bit of noise as they did new. A noisy valve means the valves are closing because there is clearance. Too much clearance (can sound louder or more metal on metal) effects performance by not allowing the valves to open enough thus starving the engine for fuel/air or to allow exhaust to vent in a timely fashion.
If they start to get quieter or something gets out of character I'll pull the panels and check them. I think the U.K. manual calls for valve maintenance every 4K miles if I'm not mistaken. My U.S. manual indicates every 2500 or something. Go figure. . .. The performance is consistent so far. I check my oil and coolant levels and don't run the Bejeezus out of it.
Incredibly sensible post and I agree. But we are responding to a bit of Hedgehog willy waving. He knows science

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Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
I kind of know engines too, because I actually work on them myself...
I also have panel removal tools, spare clips (for cars/trucks), etc., so am a bit prepared to pull panels on the PCX.
I also have panel removal tools, spare clips (for cars/trucks), etc., so am a bit prepared to pull panels on the PCX.
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Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
Just checked mine yesterday.
Considering how many people say its a lot of work i found it fairly easy. Takes at least twice as long to do on my quad.
Anyway my intake was 0.9 and exhaust 0.24 mm pretty much bang on spec although I did adjust the intake back to 0.10mm . 970 miles on my scoot and did my second oil change at the same time...
Easy job to do , no broken plastics or clips . Took about 1.5 hours start to finish...
Considering how many people say its a lot of work i found it fairly easy. Takes at least twice as long to do on my quad.
Anyway my intake was 0.9 and exhaust 0.24 mm pretty much bang on spec although I did adjust the intake back to 0.10mm . 970 miles on my scoot and did my second oil change at the same time...
Easy job to do , no broken plastics or clips . Took about 1.5 hours start to finish...

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Re: PCX Valve Adjustment
My experience as well, but I’m a little slower. Homie’s videos are super valuable.Davepcx wrote:Just checked mine yesterday.
Considering how many people say its a lot of work i found it fairly easy. Takes at least twice as long to do on my quad.
Anyway my intake was 0.9 and exhaust 0.24 mm pretty much bang on spec although I did adjust the intake back to 0.10mm . 970 miles on my scoot and did my second oil change at the same time...
Easy job to do , no broken plastics or clips . Took about 1.5 hours start to finish...