Well, if you have been following my "valve for a 79F" thread, you know my timing chain broke and I bent a couple of valves.
I am VERY glad to say that the bike is running once more. The valve train is definitely quieter than before with the exception of one valve that is ticking slightly due to too much lash.
I'm not TOO surprised by this as I did have to re-lash the three valves that where replaced, but I did it on the bench. I'll pull the valve cover off in a bit and see where I am with each valve now that the engine has gotten up to temperature and ran for a bit. Things should be fully seated... It will also give me an opportunity to re-verify that my timing is good on each cam.
The other thing I took care of today is sync my carbs. I can't remember when it was done last, so I knew it needed to be done. My carb sync came in about one day after the chain broke, so this is the first opportunity I have had to see where it was at.
And where it was was NASTY! When I first hooked it up, only the left two cylinders even pulled any alcohol up into the tube! I actually had to sit down and figure out which way to turn the center adjuster to bring the pairs close enough to get all four cylinders showing on the gauge. Thankfully, I was finally able to get everything dialed in and a nice flat line across all four cylinders.
I think I am going to go pull the bike out of the shop and take it around the block a few times to see how things are running before I let it cool off so I can re-lash the valves. Then I'll drop the pan (to TRY and find the missing master link from the original timing chain!) and change the oil and filter and HOPEFULLY have this bike back up and running WITH NO MORE PROBLEMS for a good long time!
Would it be too much to hope for better fuel economy??? I've been getting around 31 mpg in my school commute (70% interstate and 30% city streets).
I am VERY glad to say that the bike is running once more. The valve train is definitely quieter than before with the exception of one valve that is ticking slightly due to too much lash.
I'm not TOO surprised by this as I did have to re-lash the three valves that where replaced, but I did it on the bench. I'll pull the valve cover off in a bit and see where I am with each valve now that the engine has gotten up to temperature and ran for a bit. Things should be fully seated... It will also give me an opportunity to re-verify that my timing is good on each cam.
The other thing I took care of today is sync my carbs. I can't remember when it was done last, so I knew it needed to be done. My carb sync came in about one day after the chain broke, so this is the first opportunity I have had to see where it was at.
And where it was was NASTY! When I first hooked it up, only the left two cylinders even pulled any alcohol up into the tube! I actually had to sit down and figure out which way to turn the center adjuster to bring the pairs close enough to get all four cylinders showing on the gauge. Thankfully, I was finally able to get everything dialed in and a nice flat line across all four cylinders.
I think I am going to go pull the bike out of the shop and take it around the block a few times to see how things are running before I let it cool off so I can re-lash the valves. Then I'll drop the pan (to TRY and find the missing master link from the original timing chain!) and change the oil and filter and HOPEFULLY have this bike back up and running WITH NO MORE PROBLEMS for a good long time!
Would it be too much to hope for better fuel economy??? I've been getting around 31 mpg in my school commute (70% interstate and 30% city streets).
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