Got an XJ that had been sitting for about 3 years. Got it into the garage easy enough (well easy for me). It's nice having a big friend that can throw these bikes around like they are toys. But it did roll (brakes were not seized up thankfully). Once I started working on it I found that the engine was locked up. Surprising for only 3 years sitting.
I mixed up some acetone and ATF fluid 50/50 and dumped about 6 oz in each cylinder and let it sit overnight. The next day, turned it over by hand with a wrench on the timing bolt. It went a ways but seemed stuck at one point (I was being gentle with it). I added more of the acetone/ATF fluid and let it sit another night, for something to do I relaxed and cleaned the carbs.
This morning it turned over freely by hand. I drained all of the fluid (only about half oil by this point) and put in clean oil. Squirted a bit of oil in the top or each cylinder before putting the plugs back in. Don't know if that was needed but I didn't think it could hurt.
I installed the carbs and started cranking on the starter. It took it a bit before it started firing but finally (with a HUGE cloud of smoke pouring out of my garage) it fired up and actually sounded pretty good.
Next is to synch the carbs, new tires, go through the brake system. That is about it, should be ride-able at that point. The rest is cosmetic.
I mixed up some acetone and ATF fluid 50/50 and dumped about 6 oz in each cylinder and let it sit overnight. The next day, turned it over by hand with a wrench on the timing bolt. It went a ways but seemed stuck at one point (I was being gentle with it). I added more of the acetone/ATF fluid and let it sit another night, for something to do I relaxed and cleaned the carbs.
This morning it turned over freely by hand. I drained all of the fluid (only about half oil by this point) and put in clean oil. Squirted a bit of oil in the top or each cylinder before putting the plugs back in. Don't know if that was needed but I didn't think it could hurt.
I installed the carbs and started cranking on the starter. It took it a bit before it started firing but finally (with a HUGE cloud of smoke pouring out of my garage) it fired up and actually sounded pretty good.
Next is to synch the carbs, new tires, go through the brake system. That is about it, should be ride-able at that point. The rest is cosmetic.
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