In making the adjustment of the crank pin fit to the rod brasses, it is a good plan to drive the key home until the brasses are known to bind the crank pin, and then mark a line across the side face of the key and fair with the top face of the connecting rod strap, to then slacken back the key enough to ease back the brasses to a proper fit, and then mark another line on the key.
The first line will form a guide as to how much to slacken back the brasses to adjust the fit, and the second one will form a guide as to how much the key is moved when making a second adjustment, if one should be found necessary after the engine has been running.
Similarly in adjusting the main bearing boxes to the crank shaft, either the nuts, or what are called leads, may be taken to adjust the fit. Leads are necessary when the joint faces of the brasses do not meet, but are left open so that the wear can be taken up while the engine is running.
It is better, however, to let the brasses abut together, so that it may be known that the fit is correct when the nut is screwed firmly home.
The method of taking a lead is as follows: The top brass is loosened, and between the joint faces of the brasses or boxes on each side of the shaft a piece of lead wire is inserted. For a shaft of, say, four inches in diameter, the lead wire will be about 7⁄16 inch in diameter, or for a 10 inch shaft the wire should be 1⁄8 inch in diameter, and should be as long as the brass. The nuts are then screwed firmly home, and the wire will be squeezed between the brasses and thus flattened on two opposite sides, the thickness showing how far the joint faces of the brasses are apart when the bore grips the journal.
A liner, fit strip, distance piece, or shim (all these names meaning the same thing) is a strip of metal placed between the joint faces of the brasses to hold them the proper distance apart to make a working fit of the journal and brasses, when the latter are firmly bolted up.
The fit of the top brass therefore depends upon the fit strip being of the proper thickness from end to end.
Now the lead wire is the gauge for the thickness of the fit strip, the latter being made a trifle thicker than the flattened sides of the lead.
If the lead is thicker one end than the other, or if one lead is thicker than the other, the fit strips must be made so, and the leads must be marked so that it may be known which way they were placed between the brasses so that the proper fit strip may be on the proper side of the brass, and the proper end towards the crank.
Another method that is adopted in the case of large brasses is to screw down the nuts until the brasses bind the journal, and then make a mark on the nut and on the bolt thread. The nut is then slackened back as much as the judgment dictates, and a note made of how much this is, the marks forming a guide.