Yeah, so, the problem that you're experiencing is actually pretty normal from that I understand. There will always be this little bit of "timing drift" in the first few times you turn the engine over after initially setting the timing (from normal chain slack and or other slack in the system). If I had to guess, if you just set the timing as you have been, got it perfect with the alignment bridge, and instead of turning it over three times to re-check, you just buttoned the car up and turned it on, you'd be fine. You'd probably find that the timing isn't 100% bang on perfect, but is within allowable tolerances (few degrees). And my understanding is that this is what a lot of people do. It's actually what I ended up doing first time I did VANOS, and my timing as determined in DIS actually ended up being quite close to perfect. (EXPERTS: am I wrong on this? is this bad advice??)
I, like you, am a little bothered by this, and when robgill helped me do my last VANOS last time, he taught me the same trick that Sapote is suggesting: if you know that the timing is going to drift a little bit the first few revolutions of the engine, try and compensate for that in how you initially set the timing, so that it will drift into "perfect spec". It's a little frustrating and demands a LOT of trial and error, but is doable.
I, like you, am a little bothered by this, and when robgill helped me do my last VANOS last time, he taught me the same trick that Sapote is suggesting: if you know that the timing is going to drift a little bit the first few revolutions of the engine, try and compensate for that in how you initially set the timing, so that it will drift into "perfect spec". It's a little frustrating and demands a LOT of trial and error, but is doable.
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