I stated in another thread that after reassembling the beast (bent valves and I decided to replace my clutch and cam chain). I got it together and had a very fast turning engine with no compression at all. I knew that everything had gone together right and thought that perhaps I mixed the cams up. Well today when I pulled the valve cover and hit the starter, crank turns with no movement of cams and chain. Doing the rebuild I did roll the engine manually twice to check that all marks were lined up as it says in the manual. Everything was fine. Somehow the cam chain must have been riding on its edge. I pulled the head after checking compression with the finger method. Seems like I have a bent valve on number 3 cylinder. Same as when I started all this. It is hard to believe that the cams would go around twice by hand and then as soon as I hit the starter poof off the sprocket. I did get the chain hooked on the sprocket and tried by hand to make it jump so I think the sprocket is ok. At first I thought it must be toast but that seems unlikely. What an exercise in frustration this is turning out to be.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
I did not mix up the cams
Collapse
X
-
Re: I did not mix up the cams
Originally posted by olebiker
It is hard to believe that the cams would go around twice by hand and then as soon as I hit the starter poof off the sprocket. I did get the chain hooked on the sprocket and tried by hand to make it jump so I think the sprocket is ok.
Sorry...Ken Talbot
-
- do this with the bike on the centrestand so the chain hangs vertically
- use a good flashlight to look down and verify that the chain is in fact on the sprocket
- once you know it is on the sprocket, wire both sides so there is absolutely no way it can go slack while you proceed with the assembly
- pray to the XS gods, and maybe sacrifice a virgin for good measureKen Talbot
Comment
-
Originally posted by Ken Talbot
- do this with the bike on the centrestand so the chain hangs vertically
- use a good flashlight to look down and verify that the chain is in fact on the sprocket
- once you know it is on the sprocket, wire both sides so there is absolutely no way it can go slack while you proceed with the assembly
- pray to the XS gods, and maybe sacrifice a virgin for good measurehttp://farm2.static.flickr.com/1241/1480921818_241eade448_s.jpg
Comment
-
Easy
Look for an ugly 6th grader...You can't stay young forever, but you can be immature for the rest of your life...
'78E "Pathfinder" Show bike...
Lovingly restored by Dave Delzell
Drilled airbox
Tkat fork brace
Hardly mufflers
late model carbs
Newer style fuses
Oil pressure guage
Custom security system
Stainless braid brake lines
Comment
-
I bought a head from ebay once that had a mismatched valve in it. The length to the keeper notch was just a little "off". The valve had no resulting compression.Skids (Sid Hansen)
Down to one 1978 E. Stock air box with K&N filter, 81H pipes and carbs, 8500 feet elevation.
Comment
-
Oh well I now have lots of valves. Two heads. Hopefully I will be able to use one from the old head and just lap it in. Set the shims and try again. I will reuse that head gasket as it didn't run should be ok. I used pam on all the gaskets except the head gasket. It came apart ok though.http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1241/1480921818_241eade448_s.jpg
Comment
-
Manual Compression Check
Not sure exactly how. Can I check compression and get accurate results by hand. I have the motor on a stand and want to know if I should take the motor down or not. Cams look really good, hate to pull the head off for nothing.Gene (Florida)
1980 XS1100SG
Accel Coils
4-1 Jardine Exhaust
Comment
-
Originally posted by gene View PostNot sure exactly how. Can I check compression and get accurate results by hand. I have the motor on a stand and want to know if I should take the motor down or not. Cams look really good, hate to pull the head off for nothing.http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1241/1480921818_241eade448_s.jpg
Comment
Comment