R
raistian77
Guest
ok, so my next step will be to mail off the shims I have to the club and get what I need to make all the adjustments to the loose side and put some more miles on it and see what happens.The fact that it was too tight. If you look through the spark plug hole while the valve is open, a good valve will have a silver circle where the valve contacts the seat. If you look at one that has been run too tight, there is no silver ring, it hasn't really been contacting the seat. You adjust the clearance, now it can close. But the sealing surface is a little messed up, not sealing as nice as it should. Maybe it's even burnt just a tiny bit. After the valve closes a few million times, that seal starts to get better, forms the silver ring again, the valve sinks into the seat a tiny bit further, the compression gets better. As it does, the clearance gets tight again. Not sure if my reasoning is correct, but they usually do improve, and they usually need a few valve adjustments along the way. I have seen this happen on four GSes this summer, probably will see the improvement on a few more once I get them on the road. Valves were too tight, adjusted them, the compression came up. They almost always get better with miles, and need a few adjustments along the way. Had a guy here today, shop told him it needed a rebuild, due to bad compression. Adjusted the valves, got 115, 115, 116, 115.
(Low numbers due to the elevation here, at sea level they would all be in the 130s)
Of course, if the valve has been burnt too much, it will never improve, but if that was that bad it wouldn't have come up to 100 psi right after the first adjustment.
Also oil added to the cylinders does nothing to the compression numbers.