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Not much of a game. Lakers by 40. :shock:My kid is telling me we're missing the Laker game.:shock::lol:
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Not much of a game. Lakers by 40. :shock:My kid is telling me we're missing the Laker game.:shock::lol:
Yeah! Ain't it a shame?:twisted:Not much of a game. Lakers by 40. :shock:
OK, so we're all agreed that looking at photographs is a difficult way to diagnose plugs. It's like trying to rely on the pics in the haynes book. Heck I'm staring at the thing and it's not obvious to me because whether it's oil or carbon, it's the first time I've seen it in person.(sigh)...All I'm saying is it looks like oil. We know what oil can do to spark.
A plug can become oil fouled whenever it wants. He says he sees white smoke which is oil burning. I'm thinking he's basically running on 3 cylinders so I mentioned how to tell.
I'm not there. I can't see the bike for myself. If I'm wrong then I gave my best advice.
I'll bow out of this one.
Haven't gotten that far yet.what did you find when you took the diaphram cap off of #1 carb?
Haven't gotten that far yet.
But my compression numbers are 130-120-120-120. Go figure - the one with the fouled plug has the highest number.
My buddy didn't think it was oil fouling on the plug - thought it should have been goopier to be oil.
hmmmm just a idea here, take the diaphram cap off the #1 carb and see if the return spring is where it is suspose to be or is coiled up on top.
I have seen this a couple times and one of those times the owner and given up and thought that one cylinder was toast and parted out the bike.
(I got the carbs on E-bay and discovered his mistake.
the other time my buddy was pulling his hair out on his Kat as it would not run right, it now runs like a scalded cat.
OK, um... after I got that cap off, I think I realized what you meant by "coiled on top". I think you meant that it was bent off to one side and not centered on that cone on the underside of the cap. I emphasize after, because I still don't know how it was. Didn't look at the spring till the cap was all the way off.hmmmm just a idea here, take the diaphram cap off the #1 carb and see if the return spring is where it is suspose to be or is coiled up on top.
check that spring!!!!! when the spring coils up on top of the diaphram the slide will not open to let air in and you will see rich mixture conditions even though the way it runs sujest the cylinder is not firing.
so you can see wet (gas)and carbon build up.
He told you twice and it was a 5 minute job. Worked for me with the same problem. BTW you should eventually get the valves adjusted and the carbs synchronized too - you will be amazed.
My compression numbers after the valve job jumped at WOT to 150psi for all 4 cylinders. My spring looked just like yours when fully extended but who knows what it looked like when under compression inside binding?
Thanks! You saw the clean side with the Real gasket glamor shot. :-DMy compliments on a really clean and well maintained engine.
I picked up NGKs at Autozone??You can get NGK plugs at many auto parts stores -- Advance Auto, Pep Boys, and Napa all carry B8-ES plugs a lot cheaper than bike shoppes. About $1.79 - $1.89 each is normal US pricing.
Autozone does NOT carry NGK plugs.
OK. You can't trust plug pics to look how they look in person. I've mentioned the same thing a bunch of times around here.
But that plug looks oil fouled to me. That's a pretty good pic you have.
The black has an obvious shine to it. Carbon doesn't shine like that. Carbon doesn't shine at all. If carbon, and as dark as that plug looks, it would be a fluffy darker/black. Even the end of the center electrode is coated shiny black.
You have good compression but you're burning enough oil to foul the plug. I'm thinking a valve seal.
You can check the lead and plug cap connections but from what I've read here, the spark appears to be getting to the plug. I agree the pic could be deceiving and it could be something in the carb making it rich but I just don't think so. But now you mention mixture screw adjustments. Wouldn't they be set the same or very close?
Check out some sparkplug sites and compare them yourself. You'll see carbon fouled and oil fouled plugs.
If you dip that plug in water just as it looks in the pic, does the water bead?