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  • Cams

    I have the head and cylinders off my XS.The chambers on the head were crusted with carbon and I couldn,t decide if the valves were good or not.I have not disassembled the head.The reason for disassembly was I couldnt get rid of the popping back through carb 1.Then I figured while I have the head off I should check the rings.
    The bike has 40,000 miles on it and the cylinders are glazed with no ridge at all.
    The bike did burn a little oil a little sometimes.Although I have on had this one running a total of 4 or 5 hours while trying to get it to run right.
    Heres my plan,I bought a 81 head on ebay.Supposed to have 4000 miles on it.
    All the exhaust valves are tan colored and look like it ran good.
    Can I just put the cams from my '78 in these heads.I know I can,but is it plug and play?
    I am going to hone the cylinders and clean all the ring grooves and pistons and reassemble.Will my old rings seat in do you think?I know I cant get stock rings,right?
    80 SG XS1100
    14 Victory Cross Country

  • #2
    The cams in the 78 have more lift and duration than the 81 cams. It's supposed to be a hot mod - hotter cams, along with the bigger valves in the 81 head - but I haven't actually done it myself. I plan to though. Might not completely answer your question, but at least it will bump the thread to the top of the list.
    I think I have a loose screw behind the handlebars.

    '79 XS11 Standard, Jardine 4/1, Dyna DC1-1 Coils, 145 mains, 45 pilots, plastic floats - 25.7mm, XV920 fuel valves, inline fuel filters, speed bleeders, Mikes XS pods, spade-type fuse block, fork brace, progressive fork springs/shocks, manual petcocks, 750 FD, Venture cam chain tensioner, SS brake lines

    Comment


    • #3
      I wouldn't mess with the honing the cylinders or cleaning the ring grooves unless you are installing new rings. You could easily make things worse.

      At 40k miles the smoking was from probably from a leaking valve guide seal.

      Geezer
      Hi my name is Tony and I'm a bikeoholic.

      The old gray biker ain't what he used to be.

      Comment


      • #4
        Is it close enough in the cylinder to mash valves with the old cams on a new scoot?
        Ich habe dich nicht gefragt.

        Comment


        • #5
          That was my concern too Ivan.
          I may just go with the 81 cams anyway,they do have way less miles on 'em.
          On the other hand,every ounce of power is worth its weight in gold.
          80 SG XS1100
          14 Victory Cross Country

          Comment


          • #6
            I ran 78 cams on a late head with the bigger valves for quite a while. It ran alright, but with the timing the way it was, we could get almost no vacuum to do a carb synch.. like maybe 1-2hg. It would run good at high RPM, but I didn't realize what I was missing on the bottom until I put the right cams back in it a little over a year ago. I'd say at LEAST double the low end grunt versus the 78 cams. There's plenty of piston to valve clearance.. it just isn't the hot mod that people think.

            And before you say anything, the valves were good and shimmed correctly and the cam lobes were all still in spec. So.. short answer to my rambling... use the cams that were designed for the head.

            What I will say though for your plan, is the later heads had a higher valve relief area versus the early heads..(Space above the piston in the head while at top dead center) and by going to the later head on your early motor, you're going to lose some compression. The early 78-79 model pistons were actually LOWER domed than the later 80-82 pistons. They domed the pistons higher in the 80-82 models to try to make up for some of the compression lost in the larger valve relief area.. but didn't get it all made up. By putting this late head on the early motor, you will drop your compression numbers even further still than the stock later motors.

            Clean your 78 head up, put in some new valve guides, lap your valves, shim them.. and it'll be like a new motor if it's only got 40k miles. The 78 was the fastest of these bikes... stick with the winning combination.

            Now.. someone with a LATER model engine with the higher domed pistons (Later stock pistons are even higher domed than the Wiseco replacement pistons) that can find a 78 head and cams to put on...

            Tod
            Try your hardest to be the kind of person your dog thinks you are.

            You can live to be 100, as long as you give up everything that would make you want to live to be 100!

            Current bikes:
            '06 Suzuki DR650
            *'82 XJ1100 with the 1179 kit. "Mad Maxim"
            '82 XJ1100 Completely stock fixer-upper
            '82 XJ1100 Bagger fixer-upper
            '82 XJ1100 Motor/frame and lots of boxes of parts
            '82 XJ1100 Parts bike
            '81 XS1100 Special
            '81 YZ250
            '80 XS850 Special
            '80 XR100
            *Crashed/Totalled, still own

            Comment


            • #7
              I read somewhere about using an 80-82 intake cam and an early exhaust cam. Either the author didn't report about performance or I just don't remember. I can see the early cams creating more more torque, usually lower lift works well for that.

              Maybe we need a variable cam timing setup on an Xs!!!
              Ich habe dich nicht gefragt.

              Comment


              • #8
                Hey Tarzan and Ivan,

                Dan Hodges is the one that has posted about the pros and cons of mixing and matching early and late cams/heads, so a search for posts by him would reveal them. But Ivan, I believe you're right, in that he suggested the late model intake with the early model exhaust with the late heads, but finding his post would be best to be sure.

                I remember Tod's posts and his problems with low idle vacuum with the later head and early cams, think it was due to the higher lift and valve timing overlap. The hotter cams provide more power at the higher rpm range where the larger valves can help feed the engine more air/fuel mixture, but apparently can cause a loss of low rpm grunt.

                So it might also depend on where you plan to do most of your engine running, low or high rpm as to which cams or combination you decide to put in.
                T.C.
                T. C. Gresham
                81SH "Godzilla" . . .1179cc super-rat.
                79SF "The Teacher" . . .basket case!
                History shows again and again,
                How nature points out the folly of men!

                Comment


                • #9
                  I could be wrong, but I think it's the other way around. It was suggested to use a 78/79 intake cam and leave the later stock exhaust cam... wasn't it?

                  And Ivan.. ol' machinist buddy ol' pal. When you get back to operating speed, I sure wouldn't mind having a couple sets of cam sprockets degreed if that would be anything you could do very easily.. Probably could have a small market on here doing it if you could get set up for it. I think Weber has a degreed cam for our bikes, but they aren't cheap... like me!


                  Tod
                  Try your hardest to be the kind of person your dog thinks you are.

                  You can live to be 100, as long as you give up everything that would make you want to live to be 100!

                  Current bikes:
                  '06 Suzuki DR650
                  *'82 XJ1100 with the 1179 kit. "Mad Maxim"
                  '82 XJ1100 Completely stock fixer-upper
                  '82 XJ1100 Bagger fixer-upper
                  '82 XJ1100 Motor/frame and lots of boxes of parts
                  '82 XJ1100 Parts bike
                  '81 XS1100 Special
                  '81 YZ250
                  '80 XS850 Special
                  '80 XR100
                  *Crashed/Totalled, still own

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by trbig View Post
                    I could be wrong, but I think it's the other way around. It was suggested to use a 78/79 intake cam and leave the later stock exhaust cam... wasn't it?

                    And Ivan.. ol' machinist buddy ol' pal. When you get back to operating speed, I sure wouldn't mind having a couple sets of cam sprockets degreed if that would be anything you could do very easily.. Probably could have a small market on here doing it if you could get set up for it. I think Weber has a degreed cam for our bikes, but they aren't cheap... like me!


                    Tod
                    I have thought about this several times. I had figured on just elongating the mounting holes and making some thick washers to fit. The problem is I don't have a rotory table on the conventional mill at work, which would make that a snap. I would have to make a fixture, and a lever to manually pull the sprocket against the endmill. It wouldn't be very precise or accurate. If I had the use of a rotory table, I would have several sets already.
                    Ich habe dich nicht gefragt.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      What about mounting an old head to the table,(Minus all the springs/shims/valves) mounting the sprockets onto some cams and bolt the cam caps down. Find the proper size cutting bit, and put it through the existing bolt hole. You could use the slots on the cams to use a wrench and turn the cams... leaving the cutting tool stationary. Some kind of gauge on the cams so you got a max of @ 5 degrees? That way it would be cutting true.

                      Or maybe not... lol.


                      Tod
                      Try your hardest to be the kind of person your dog thinks you are.

                      You can live to be 100, as long as you give up everything that would make you want to live to be 100!

                      Current bikes:
                      '06 Suzuki DR650
                      *'82 XJ1100 with the 1179 kit. "Mad Maxim"
                      '82 XJ1100 Completely stock fixer-upper
                      '82 XJ1100 Bagger fixer-upper
                      '82 XJ1100 Motor/frame and lots of boxes of parts
                      '82 XJ1100 Parts bike
                      '81 XS1100 Special
                      '81 YZ250
                      '80 XS850 Special
                      '80 XR100
                      *Crashed/Totalled, still own

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by trbig View Post
                        What about mounting an old head to the table,(Minus all the springs/shims/valves) mounting the sprockets onto some cams and bolt the cam caps down. Find the proper size cutting bit, and put it through the existing bolt hole. You could use the slots on the cams to use a wrench and turn the cams... leaving the cutting tool stationary. Some kind of gauge on the cams so you got a max of @ 5 degrees? That way it would be cutting true.

                        Or maybe not... lol.


                        Tod
                        Well, using a good jig like that could work. The problem is the cutter would have to parallel the cam. I was thinking about just turning a spud on a block of aluminum, that the sprocket would center on, and figuring out the amount of rotation needed with a couple dowel pins to bump against the bog holes in the sprocket. it would be very repeatable, but take lots of time and material. Usually, for me any way, things like this rarely work in the alpha stage of engineering, sometimes in beta stage but usually in the range of foxtrot to zulu...

                        With a rotory table, it just mounts to the mill table, and you count the number of turns on the handle to figure out the degrees. easy, but the cheap ones are $500+
                        Ich habe dich nicht gefragt.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Hey Ivan,
                          If you just need two dots for indicators,you could mount the sprocket on the table and indicate the mark so it is at a spot you can verify.Then trig out the dot locations and drill or use an endmill and make a couple dots at those locations.
                          I could do it,but I just changed jobs and we cant use the machines for personal use.
                          Am I misunderstanding what needs to be done?
                          80 SG XS1100
                          14 Victory Cross Country

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Hi Tarzan,
                            Its easy to check the valves on a head when its off the engine,
                            tilt the head on its side and fill the ports with petrol, then check for leaks
                            or seapage, if it doesnt leak all good to go if it leaks, just lap the valves,
                            then while the head is apart clean off all the carbon build up in the ports,
                            replace the valve guide seals and your good to go.

                            As Geezer said, I wouldnt mess with the cylinders unless you replace the rings.

                            In relation to the cams, the intake cams were the same through out the series, only the exhaust cam is different, the early model cam had the longer exhaust duration.
                            pete


                            new owner of
                            08 gen2 hayabusa


                            former owner
                            1981 xs1100 RH (aus) (5N5)
                            zrx carbs
                            18mm float height
                            145 main jets
                            38 pilots
                            slide needle shimmed .5mm washer
                            fitted with v/stax and uni pod filters

                            [url]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3pA8dwxmAVA&feature=mfu_in_order&list=UL[/url]

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by tarzan View Post
                              Hey Ivan,
                              If you just need two dots for indicators,you could mount the sprocket on the table and indicate the mark so it is at a spot you can verify.Then trig out the dot locations and drill or use an endmill and make a couple dots at those locations.
                              I could do it,but I just changed jobs and we cant use the machines for personal use.
                              Am I misunderstanding what needs to be done?
                              The point being quick machining, with high repeatability. Dialing in the sprocket center each time and then relying on a 35 year old knee mill with out a DRO would be a pain. If I were to make a fixture that would allow for one setup that I could slap sprockets on and make them quick, it would almost be something I could do after work for a nominal fee for anyone that wants to send me their sprockets.
                              Ich habe dich nicht gefragt.

                              Comment

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