B
bmt
Guest
A friend recently gave me an 82 GS550M that had been sitting, in pieces, in his garage for the past five years. prior to that it sat in another PO's garage since at least 1996. from what i can piece together, from both my friend's recollection, and the spare parts that came with the bike, the orginal PO had a piston seize. after repair he failed to properly reinstall the cam chain and bent two intake valves when he started it. My friend bought a new head, new camshafts, new valves, but never got around to the work (already had a working bike).
I've gotten the bike reassembled and running smoothly and am now going through all of the other issues associated with a bike that has sat in a garage for 12 years.
I replaced the stator today and while draining the oil to do it I noticed a fair amount of fine metal shavings in the oil drain pan. the large majority of which could be picked up with a magnet.
The bike was delivered to me with no oil in it (drained by PO). Since putting the bike back together I've not ridden it anywhere, just idled for a 5-10 minutes at a time while doing carb work and electrical stuff.
Right now I've got about $700 in the project and expect to spend another $600 to make the bike reliable given what i know needs to be fixed. I'd really like to identify where these shavings developed before I spend too much more on the bike to determine if I should just cut my losses. One problem is that the tires and brakes are not currently safe so just popping the bike in gear and riding around to check for a noisy transmission doesn't seem like a good idea and dropping another few hundred on new tires prior to figuring out these metal shavings doesn't seem smart either. have myself a catch 22 here.
Is it likely these shavings were already in the engine as a result of the earlier piston seizure or damage to the camshafts from the PO work or am i looking at another issue that I don't even know about? Could anyone recommend a good workflow to troubleshoot from without actually riding the bike or if possible splitting the crankcase (mainly I'm trying to avoid ruining the $100 athena gasket kit i used for the top end rebuild).
I would have never gotten this far without all of the information posted on the forum so a big thank you to the GS community for that. hopefully I've provided enough information to solicit some help.
thanks,
~Brian
-here is a link to some of my project bike. not many, i'm usually too greasy to pic up the camera!
http://picasaweb.google.com/briantwilley/Motorcycle
I've gotten the bike reassembled and running smoothly and am now going through all of the other issues associated with a bike that has sat in a garage for 12 years.
I replaced the stator today and while draining the oil to do it I noticed a fair amount of fine metal shavings in the oil drain pan. the large majority of which could be picked up with a magnet.
The bike was delivered to me with no oil in it (drained by PO). Since putting the bike back together I've not ridden it anywhere, just idled for a 5-10 minutes at a time while doing carb work and electrical stuff.
Right now I've got about $700 in the project and expect to spend another $600 to make the bike reliable given what i know needs to be fixed. I'd really like to identify where these shavings developed before I spend too much more on the bike to determine if I should just cut my losses. One problem is that the tires and brakes are not currently safe so just popping the bike in gear and riding around to check for a noisy transmission doesn't seem like a good idea and dropping another few hundred on new tires prior to figuring out these metal shavings doesn't seem smart either. have myself a catch 22 here.
Is it likely these shavings were already in the engine as a result of the earlier piston seizure or damage to the camshafts from the PO work or am i looking at another issue that I don't even know about? Could anyone recommend a good workflow to troubleshoot from without actually riding the bike or if possible splitting the crankcase (mainly I'm trying to avoid ruining the $100 athena gasket kit i used for the top end rebuild).
I would have never gotten this far without all of the information posted on the forum so a big thank you to the GS community for that. hopefully I've provided enough information to solicit some help.
thanks,
~Brian
-here is a link to some of my project bike. not many, i'm usually too greasy to pic up the camera!
http://picasaweb.google.com/briantwilley/Motorcycle