jharvey
Forum Apprentice
Greetings,
Someone tried to steal my motorcycle overnight two weeks ago [outdoor gravel parking lot behind my apartment building], and in the unsuccessful attempt, left the bike lying on its side for me to find the next afternoon – guessing about 14 hours on its left side.
The left hand mirror and left rear turn signal housing were smashed, and once I got the bike upright, I checked the obvious things – lead acid battery had not leaked and levels between cells remained even, a little bit of gas leaked out of the tank, but surprisingly little, considering it was essentially full, and how long it would’ve been lying on its side - in fact, the only evidence was a bit of a residual trail on the left side of the tank, nothing on the ground at all and no smell of spilled gas. I then took out the plugs and manually rotated the engine a few times from the rear wheel to make sure there was no chance of hydro-lock.
I had ridden it a pair of times since for about an hour each (no problems), when someone suggested I might need to replace the oil in case gas had gotten into the oil while the bike was on its side - telling me that I’d be able to smell it as soon as I removed the dipstick cover. So when I did, so, there was no immediate smell of gas, even if I got quite close to the hole, but if I literally got so close that the tip of my nose was extending into the hole and took a deep breath, I could smell gas - not strong but there. By the same token, I put a few drops of oil onto a paper towel and couldn’t smell anything until my nose was essentially touching the paper towel itself - but I could smell it then. (I suppose, since I never did such a test before, that smell could have been there as a normal thing, even before the bike was knocked over. It would’ve been nice to have had a before, and after ‘scratch n sniff’ test.)
(In case this is relevant, this bike uses a vacuum style fuel petcock – so there are no On, Off, or Prime settings, just On and Reserve. 1980 GS400ET. )
So my question is, would there be at least some trace of gas in the oil simply as a function of oil being in the cylinders during combustion (especially given the bike's age), or should even the faintest whiff require immediate replacement?
Thanks,
Someone tried to steal my motorcycle overnight two weeks ago [outdoor gravel parking lot behind my apartment building], and in the unsuccessful attempt, left the bike lying on its side for me to find the next afternoon – guessing about 14 hours on its left side.
The left hand mirror and left rear turn signal housing were smashed, and once I got the bike upright, I checked the obvious things – lead acid battery had not leaked and levels between cells remained even, a little bit of gas leaked out of the tank, but surprisingly little, considering it was essentially full, and how long it would’ve been lying on its side - in fact, the only evidence was a bit of a residual trail on the left side of the tank, nothing on the ground at all and no smell of spilled gas. I then took out the plugs and manually rotated the engine a few times from the rear wheel to make sure there was no chance of hydro-lock.
I had ridden it a pair of times since for about an hour each (no problems), when someone suggested I might need to replace the oil in case gas had gotten into the oil while the bike was on its side - telling me that I’d be able to smell it as soon as I removed the dipstick cover. So when I did, so, there was no immediate smell of gas, even if I got quite close to the hole, but if I literally got so close that the tip of my nose was extending into the hole and took a deep breath, I could smell gas - not strong but there. By the same token, I put a few drops of oil onto a paper towel and couldn’t smell anything until my nose was essentially touching the paper towel itself - but I could smell it then. (I suppose, since I never did such a test before, that smell could have been there as a normal thing, even before the bike was knocked over. It would’ve been nice to have had a before, and after ‘scratch n sniff’ test.)
(In case this is relevant, this bike uses a vacuum style fuel petcock – so there are no On, Off, or Prime settings, just On and Reserve. 1980 GS400ET. )
So my question is, would there be at least some trace of gas in the oil simply as a function of oil being in the cylinders during combustion (especially given the bike's age), or should even the faintest whiff require immediate replacement?
Thanks,

