As the title implies I've been trying a little experiment with Marvel Mystery Oil. That stuff sure looks a lot like transmission fluid - smells like it when it burns too. I've been getting a little smoke from my breather, and a recent post suggested that this is probably caused by blow-by past the rings. I also have a little engine-chirp issue, which I think is coming from a valve lifter. I read some other stuff about MMO being used to free-up stuck rings, so I thought I would give it a try.
Anyway, Friday afternoon I put old Betsy out on the driveway (which is fairly steep) to get the tops of the cylinders as level as I could. I cranked the shaft around until all the cylinders were about the 1/2 way point, and then filled them up with MMO. I let it sit for two days, then removed the spark plugs and stuck 1/2" clear plastic tubing into the holes (fits perfect) with the other ends in a catch bucket. Cranked the kickstarter several times and got the remaining oil out of the cylinders - then I cleaned the plugs, reinstalled and started her up. Looked like I was fogging for mosquitos.
Everybody seems to be paranoid about running an engine with this kind of stuff in it, but it says on the bottle it's a normal additive, so I went for a little spin. I want it to stay in a while anyway to thoroughly clean the inside of the engine. What a difference! Transmission shifts easier and I didn't hear any chirping.
I'll have to run it a while before I'll be able to tell if I've still got smoke coming from the breather, but either way I'm glad I gave her this treatment. It works kind of like a leak-down tester. After two days cylinders 1 & 4 didn't have much MMO left inside them, while 2 & 3 didn't seem to have lost much. If I do have a ring problem, at least now I know which cylinders to keep an eye on. Anyway, just passing it along.
Anyway, Friday afternoon I put old Betsy out on the driveway (which is fairly steep) to get the tops of the cylinders as level as I could. I cranked the shaft around until all the cylinders were about the 1/2 way point, and then filled them up with MMO. I let it sit for two days, then removed the spark plugs and stuck 1/2" clear plastic tubing into the holes (fits perfect) with the other ends in a catch bucket. Cranked the kickstarter several times and got the remaining oil out of the cylinders - then I cleaned the plugs, reinstalled and started her up. Looked like I was fogging for mosquitos.
Everybody seems to be paranoid about running an engine with this kind of stuff in it, but it says on the bottle it's a normal additive, so I went for a little spin. I want it to stay in a while anyway to thoroughly clean the inside of the engine. What a difference! Transmission shifts easier and I didn't hear any chirping.
I'll have to run it a while before I'll be able to tell if I've still got smoke coming from the breather, but either way I'm glad I gave her this treatment. It works kind of like a leak-down tester. After two days cylinders 1 & 4 didn't have much MMO left inside them, while 2 & 3 didn't seem to have lost much. If I do have a ring problem, at least now I know which cylinders to keep an eye on. Anyway, just passing it along.
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