These wet black rings are the fibre washers that seal the ends of the rocker shafts. They get very hot and are subject to oil seepage from the rocker box.
I need some new ones.
These wet black rings are the fibre washers that seal the ends of the rocker shafts. They get very hot and are subject to oil seepage from the rocker box.
I need some new ones.
The sump plate looked a bit mangled when I took it out after the oil was drained.
After degreasing I cleaned it up using some clock cleaner which is an ammoniated fluid used for stripping the corrosion from brass and copper. It works very well on the gauze.
This week, we are mostly decorating in Cromer! The FH now has 205 miles on the clock, and is still smoking a tiny bit and leaking a bit of oil, possibly from the head gasket.
Here it is, collecting caulk from Screwfix and CO2 from Argos...
I also checked the QD hub nuts after an unusual sound began from the back - they had loosened off a lot.
There's no picture, but yesterday I rode a couple of miles along the main road at 1/4 throttle, killing the engine and coasting to a halt. The timing side plug was brown on the centre electrode, black on the outer. I won't be making any carburetion changes for the moment!
I snatched a few minutes in the workshop today to look at the cylinder head leak and the oily exhaust on the Huntmaster. It passes a little bit of smoke from both cylinders but nothing persistent and only when pulling away. To start the investigation and to try to eliminate the valves and valve guides and further home on the problem I thought I would do a compression test.
I started with the drive side, which is the side that is showing oil in the exhaust pipe. This revealed a figure of something like 65 psi with the cylinder dry. Perfect compression at 7.25 to 1 should be giving us something a little over 90 psi.
This didn't improve after several kicks.
Riding back from the railway yesterday along the main road revealed that the bike will maintain 45 miles an hour at just under a quarter throttle - so until we are properly run-in we are not going to be able to do anything other than look at the carburettor slide cut away at the very most. We can adjust the pilot air again but we won't be able to examine the mixture from the main jet.
Just a little trip out this morning to pick up a part for the boiler from the Cromer. The bike is running very nicely and I managed to start it without the centre stand.
It's feeling a little bit squirmy so I decided to check the tyre pressures - the rear was a little bit down so we'll see what happens.
I also put some tape and some marks to the throttle to help me set up the carburetion in the future.