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Top End Noob

  • Thread starter Thread starter MisterCinders
  • Start date Start date
OK - the tach issue was very simple. Way back when I disconnected the tach cable, the actual cable slithered right out of the tube. Once I remembered that and snaked it back in, the tach works fine.

I suspect that is NOT how it is supposed to be, but I can work with the results for now.

Still getting some smoke when it idles, but it looks like its stuff burning off the pipes, especially underneath where the 4 header pipes join into the one tail pipe. I continue to scour for leaks to make sure that it is only old grime and not fresh oil drips from a leak.

Now I have to revisit the idle and mixture puzzles with these carbs. So far it seems to need choke to run, but the smoke investigation deters me from running the bike very long. The idle also wanders a bit, sometimes struggling to hold rpms unless I adjust the idle screw, but then creeping up too high.

I need to continue to fiddle with that to get her idling steadily, so I can set the fuel/air screws and synch.
 
Did you replace the intake boot O-rings yet? If not, you need to otherwise you can get vacuum leaks.

One other thing you should do is torque the cylinder head again after you put a few heat cycles on the engine. Do NOT skip this step otherwise you can get leaks. Also, check the valve clearances again.
 
Follow up question.

I understand that cold compression numbers tend to be low, and that new rings and jug hones will take time to settle in before compression will increase after use.

How long in terms of miles/running time before I should expect to see better compression results?

I just got a replacement head that may not be necessary if this rebuild settles into place. OTOH, if that No. 3 cylinder continues to show bad compression, it has to be that bad spark plug hole, since I have rebuilt/replace everything else. So I can clean up this second head and do another teardown, if I have to. I prefer to stick with the current build if possible, though.
 
Did you replace the intake boot O-rings yet? If not, you need to otherwise you can get vacuum leaks.

One other thing you should do is torque the cylinder head again after you put a few heat cycles on the engine. Do NOT skip this step otherwise you can get leaks. Also, check the valve clearances again.

Yes, I replaced the intake boot o-rings and fasteners with fresh rubber and SS allen-heads from cycle o-rings. I also replaced all the carb o-rings with a set from Barr. Just in case, I have a full set of new carb rubber from Barr as a back up.

Thanks for the follow-up torque advice. I checked and adjusted the valve clearances when I put her back together. If I cannot get the idle sorted, I can go back to those valve clearances. Between my old spares, some club shims and the parts on this new head, I am swimming in shims. :D Once the thing is running, I will hook the club up with plenty.
 
I'd say after 2-300 miles you should see your numbers improve. Maybe not even that long. Don't baby it!

Repairing spark plug threads has been done before with the head in place. There's advice there about controlling debris from the drilling. Try some forum searches.
 
I'd say after 2-300 miles you should see your numbers improve. Maybe not even that long. Don't baby it!

Repairing spark plug threads has been done before with the head in place. There's advice there about controlling debris from the drilling. Try some forum searches.

I already repaired those threads, but the lower compression in that cylinder relative to the others makes me think that repair might be losing compression, leaky, etc.
 
Yowsa! That new head came in and it looks pretty sweet. The valves and seats are in great shape, just need to clean off some carbon. Dropped the valves into some Berryman's and am very tempted to go ahead and swap heads.

Did some more fiddling with the idle. It is running, but not great. Plugs looked a little sooty, so I backed out the air screws a little. That helped some.

My chief concern on the idle so far is that the No. 3 exhaust header is much cooler than the others. Not ice cold, so I think it is firing. But it only feels warm, not yank your hand away hot like the other three pipes. The exhaust also is backfiring/popping at the tail pipe. Will continue to fiddle.
 
Sounds like #3 isn't firing. I'd check for spark first.
 
OK that No. 3 cylinder is possessed. Checked the plug grounded against the frame, and it's getting spark. The float bowl has fuel. But that pipe is cold.

New compression test shows improvement, but No. 3 is still out of step. 120/120/90/120

So fuel, spark and some compression but No. 3 gives me the bird. What the hell?
 
I have an odd theory on the No. 3 cylinder. Tell me if this makes sense.

Recall that I have spark, low but enough compression and fuel flow, but no firing on that cylinder.

When I pull the No. 3 and plug and ground it against the engine, it sparks fine. Also, the No. 2 cylinder is running, so the coils and ignition are not the problem. After beating my head against a wall, the spark plug insert came to mind. The instructions for the plug insert said to use blue loctite to secure the new threads, so I did. Is it possible that the loctite is causing the plug to not ground well? Is loctite conductive? If I used too much of the stuff, or should not have use it at all, could this be blocking that cylinder from getting a good spark?

If this theory craps out, then I am out of ideas. OTOH, if the loctite is the villain, I already have a head to swap out (and it looks better than my original so far), so I can commit to that as a fix.
 
I don't think blue loctite is your problem. Most of the contact between the insert and head should still be metal to metal.
 
Bumping with a "progress" report.

I never could get the No. cylinder to fire. Plugs looked dry, so I tore down the carbs and dipped them again. Sprayed out every passage, and they look completely clear. The compression in that cylinder is lower than the other three, so perhaps it is not generating enough vacuum to pull in fuel. There is gas in the floats, so it's getting to the carbs.

Otherwise, I still have my spark insulation theory, but dry plugs probably strike that out. At this point, my plan is:

Do one more compression test dry, then wet, to see if No. 3's problems are piston rings or valves. This will determine how far I go back into the beast. If the test show ring problems, I will double check that the rings did not get out of line (i.e., the gaps fell out of staggered position) when I reinstalled the pistons into the jugs.

Even if the tests show valve problems, that second cylinder head is cleaning up to be much better than my original (no spark plug thread insert, nice looking valves/seats), so it's going on the bike either way.

Just hoping that the compression problem is valves not rings. I have fresh base and head gaskets for each stage, just in case.

We'll see.
 
Have access to a compressor/leakdown tester? Think the leak down tester is available as a loaner tool from most autoparts stores.

Use the tool and isolate where your compression leak is coming from.

Nic
 
Damn.

No leak down test, but cold compression on that No. 3 cylinder comes in as follows:

dry = 95 psi
wet = 150+ psi

So those rings must be out of whack UNLESS compression is supposed to jump under ordinary conditions, and the compression in that cylinder is light because of new rings.

Before I dive back into this sumbitch, is there anything I can/should try first with these numbers?

Although I did not re-test compression on the other three cylinders, recall that prior cold/dry tests showed about 120 psi at last test.

Any ideas?
 
Bump? Really not trying to redo rings if there is another problem.
 
How much oil did you put in? Should only be 1 tsp. 150 psi seems high. You need to seat those rings before you can get full compression. Take your next reading in a couple hundred miles of aggressive riding.
 
95 is enough compression for it to fire and run more or less normally, although with just one cylinder that low it might not idle smoothly. It has to be a spark or fuel problem. You could ground the spark plug to the engine with a jumper wire to test your blue locktite theory. It does not sound plausible to me, but it could be possible. Tried a new spark plug?

Most likely fuel isn't getting into the cylinder for some reason. Does it fire a few times if you drip a little gas down the spark plug hole? Is the choke feed passage in the float bowl itself blocked? How is the fuel screw adjustment? Try opening it up more? How is the throttle synchronization? Maybe this carburetor has the throttle completely closed? Perhaps a clogged pilot jet?
Broken off fuel screw tip stuck in the port?
I have not read this entire thread, may have missed a few details.

I wouldn't tear it apart to fix the compression problem without a try at running it in. You need to get it firing on all four.
 
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Is the choke feed passage in the float bowl itself blocked?

I pulled the carbs apart this weekend soaked them again, and then shined lights, sprayed and checked every passage and hole.

Main jet passage clear. Fuel jet passage clear. Float needle passage clear. Choke passage was also clear.

95 psi should pull fuel from the bowl, and there is fuel in that bowl. I also made sure that the vacuum line was plugged, since I am testing things on PRIME with the tank on the side.

This riddle is seriously working my nerves. I can tunnel back into the head/cylinders, but 95 psi should not obstruct that cylinder from firing. If I go back down the rabbit hole and determine that the problem was a carb or electrical issue, I cannot be responsible for the blind rage that will overtake me.

To recap:

Spark plug, spark wire, ignition and coil all check out.

Fuel in the bowl.

Carbs cleaned (the real way) multiple times.

New rubber o-rings for the intake boots, carbs etc.

Valves checked and within specs.

Cold/dry compression is 125/125/95/125. A wet test on No. 3 brings compression up significantly, but I think I added too much oil for the wet test, since I read "tsp. or so" as "tblsp. or so."

Engine runs only on three cylinders, No. 3 pipe is cold. Plug looks dry, though, so something is blocking the fuel.

If that wonky compression result means I botched the gaps out of 120 degrees (perhaps when wrestling the pistons back into the jugs?), so be it. I will go back in to fix that.

If the No. 3 cylinder's demon is that plug insert, so be it. I have a replacement head and valves that I am cleaning and lapping now. That wet test showed improved compression, though. I figured that a compression loss at the plug threads would (like a bad valve) show consistently low compression.
 
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