Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Cylinders - To hone or not to hone, that is the question
Collapse
X
-
Cylinders - To hone or not to hone, that is the question
I'm overhauling the top end of my '81 GS850G that has 30K miles. I've removed and inspected the cylinders. They are definitely smooth (some people will say they are "glazed", which my definition of the word 'glaze' isn't an accurate statement, but I digress) and the cylinders don't appear to have any gouging or imperfections. I've read conflicting opinions about honing cylinders. Some say yay and some say nay. What does this trusting community of GS riders have to say on this matter? To hone or not to hone, that is the question. -
AJ
Definitely hone the cylinders. The rings and cylinders have to wear together to make a good seal. If you turn the rings in the grooves (as you inevitably will), the rings will no longer line up exactly the way before you took apart the engine. Honing the cylinder with a flex hone ("ball hone") breaks the glaze and creates a new cross hatch in the cylinder walls. The rings and cylinder walls can now wear together to make a new mating pattern.
Not hard to do and the hones aren't expensive. This link looked good.
Comment
-
Hone.........Rob
1983 1100ES, 98' ST1100, 02' DR-Z400E and a few other 'bits and pieces'
Are you on the GSR Google Earth Map yet? http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=170533
Comment
-
Forum LongTimerBard Award Winner
GSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter- Jul 2005
- 15152
- Marysville, Michigan
Originally posted by AJ View PostDefinitely hone the cylinders. The rings and cylinders have to wear together to make a good seal. If you turn the rings in the grooves (as you inevitably will), the rings will no longer line up exactly the way before you took apart the engine.
Two strokes are pinned so they can't but 4 strokes can and do.
Comment
-
oblique
Dont modern engines have special superhard coatings on the cylinder walls?
Comment
-
Originally posted by oblique View PostDont modern engines have special superhard coatings on the cylinder walls?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikasil
However, you would have to really stretch the imagination to call a GS engine "modern".
.sigpic
mine: 2000 Honda GoldWing GL1500SE and 1980 GS850G'K' "Junior"
hers: 1982 GS850GL - "Angel" and 1969 Suzuki T250 Scrambler
#1 son: 1986 Yamaha Venture Royale 1300 and 1982 GS650GL "Rat Bagger"
#2 son: 1980 GS1000G
Family Portrait
Siblings and Spouses
Mom's first ride
Want a copy of my valve adjust spreadsheet for your 2-valve per cylinder engine? Send me an e-mail request (not a PM)
(Click on my username in the upper-left corner for e-mail info.)
Comment
-
megatwin
The key would be to" lightly" hone the cylinders,just enough to break the glaze and get a cross hatch pattern.
I have seen them honed nearly to the next over size.
Comment
-
williampkerr
-
Originally posted by 850 Combat View PostJust curious, why take it apart at only 30000 miles?
Comment
-
williampkerr
Originally posted by 850 Combat View PostJust curious, why take it apart at only 30000 miles?
Comment
-
Originally posted by williampkerr View PostI'm new to working on motorcycles, so I'm learning as I go. I did a wet and dry compression test and noticed the compression rise with the wet test. 1 and 4 cylinders where about 80 psi while 3 and 4 cylinders were about 120 psi on the dry test and each rose about 20 psi on the wet test. A friend suggested I inspect the cylinders and rings and valves, which I'm in the process of doing as we speak.
Poor compression is almost always due to neglected valves.
Comment
-
Flyboy
Has it been standing? If so, how long?
Riding the snot out of it for a while will bring those numbers up if she has been idle.
And yes, Dale is spot on, rings do not stay stationary in the pistons, they rotate in the ring grooves all the time, so it is of no consequence how the rings are fitted.
I have seen people spend silly amounts of time tryingto stagger the ring end gaps perfectly, just wasting their time.
After the first two minutes of running, those ring gaps are no where near where they were when installed.
But, yes, hone for sure, if you doing a top end refresh, don't do a half job, also thought it was a typo, at 30 000 miles the motor is only just run in now.
Comment
-
williampkerr
Originally posted by tkent02 View PostDid you check the valve clearances before taking it apart?
Poor compression is almost always due to neglected valves.
Comment
Comment