PO says he had it running, but poorly, as recently as September. He took it to a mechanic, who told him the CDI box is bad (causing the bike to die after several minutes) and the carbs need to be rebuilt. When he bought it the clutch was going but it's apparently completely gone now. There was oil seeping from the left side of the head gasket, but the mechanic said that wasn't affecting the cylinders. Too much $$$ for him, and he's not capable of the work so he gave up on it. PO let it sit for the winter too with no gas in the tank (yet didn't drain the float bowls) so there's no doubt now it needs a carb cleaning and now it has some rust in the tank.
OK, I get the bike home. I wouldn't even try to start it without cleaning the carbs and the tank first. So my first order of business is to run a compression test. She turns over smoothly with a good batt. 75 psi cold/dry on cylinder #1. Ugh. #2 is even worse: 65 PSI. Life gets better on the right-hand side: 115 on #3 and 125 on #4. Yeah, but 65 is WAY low. Pressures get about 10-15 psi better wet in all cylinders, so the rings aren't that bad. I also notice at this point that the plugs are one heat range hotter than spec. So I'm fully expecting a couple of cooked valves now.
(it's really hard for me to believe that he could have taken it to a mechanic with compression that low in two cylinders and a suspect head gasket and said mechanic say it only needs a carb rebuild...)
Oh yeah, and the outer rings on the plugs from #1 and #2 were almost totally clean.
Drained the crankcase, which apparently held about a 50/50 oil/gas mixture. Ugh. Off come the tank, carbs, and valve cover. I check valve clearances. Six of eight are OK, two are too tight for my .0015" feeler. One is on #2 with the lowest comp, but #1's check out. The other unmeasurable gap was on #3, which was in the OK compression range. I have yet to find a local source for .01 mm feelers. Man that's a tight tolerance! The timing marks on the cam shafts and ignition check out.
OK, off with the head! Exhaust splits on it's way off the bike. Ugh. There's no major valve damage that I or my friend can see. No holes in pistons. No major cracks in the head or scorch marks on the gasket. But maybe it was a bad head gasket after all? Cylinder walls 2 and 3 feel good: no major scoring or scratches. Turn the crank and check 1 & 4 at BDC - no scoring.
My friend is turning the crank, looking for signs of binding; nothing. He stops between centers, then I notice that #2 and #3 are about 3/8" apart in travel. Correct me if I'm wrong, but that seems very wrong. Measure #1 and #4, similar story. Further investigation reveals that #1 and #2 are hitting TDC (and yes, they're reaching TDC) maybe 10-15 degrees advanced from the cam and points timing. #1 reaches TDC when the mark is above the letter F - not the line it marks - on the timing guide.
Now I'm feeling awfully sick. I hadn't done much looking about the bottoms on these motors. Now I have more questions than answers.
- Today I got the crankcase off and have it up on the bench. Any advice/tips/gotchas for the disassembly?
- Does the crank come as pieces or unitized? Could somebody have re-assembled it incorrectly to cause this? The drawings in the parts fiche show an assembly of dozens of parts with the roller bearings. The Suz service manual just shows checking and "replace if bad".
- Should I just try to find a used crank somewhere? Can they be swapped between blocks? (some searching through the old Q&A suggests yes to the latter)
- It seems kind of obvious to say yes, but would this timing cause the low compression #'s in those two cylinders? I mean, even with the timing off they still have to pass TDC with the valves closed toward the end of the compression cycle - albeit with a shortened intake cycle!
I'll attach a pic. It's hard to see that #4 and #1 are off (#4 is lower), but it's pretty clear that #2 and #3 are off.
Comment