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Friday, 15 September 2017

SQ4 - Oil Line Mod

I'm having a few issues with oiling at the minute, some of which are due to my own stupidity and some of which are not.

I have had persistent problems with the feed union to the cylinder head, which despite re-tightening on several occasions has always backed off after a few hundred miles. Seeking advice on this on the AOMCC forum, Nev Hunter from Australia pointed out that it was the fibre washer I was using that was at fault. This area gets so hot that it will cook a fibre washer...


In this location you must fit a copper washer:


The second problem was not of my making. There are two oil lines leading up to the cylinder head from the crankcase; from the front main bearing as shown in this diagram of the 4G, and from the rear main bearing, a banjo under the timing cover on later bikes. The assembly consists of two lines _ a 3/16" line for the gauge, and a 1/8" line for the rockers which seems illogical but the 1/8" line is there to choke the feed to the rockers and to maintain back pressure at the main bearing.

Pressure loss in a pipe is affected not only by the size of the hole but also by the length of the pipe, so that long, small pipe to the rocker creates a restriction in oil flow to the rockers which has the effect of increasing oil pressure at the banjo, and hence increases the pressure the gauge sees. Mathematically, the effect is demonstrated to engineers by the Darcy-Wiesbach equation which has been useful in most of my oilfield career when predicting the performance of hydraulic fluids and chemicals racing along thousands of meters of small bore lines and back.
Problem was, several assemblies are out there that are the wrong way round, which results in over-oiling to the rocker box and a gauge that under-reads (since the oil pressure to the rockers is lower), so we will set about fixing the problem.


4G Lubrication System

You need to take the tank off to have a look.


Here are the oil lines - the 1/8" pressure gauge line and the 3/16" rocker feed line. We are going to swap these around:


Here I've cut the old 3/16" rocker feed line and fitted a 1/8" equal union, which will mate directly with the existing line to the gauge:


Using the remains of the existing 3/16" rocker oil feed, just the last few inches to the head, I've fitted a 1/8" nipple & nut to mate with the old gauge line coming from the double banjo under the timing case. In this picture, I'd kicked the engine over to prove I had oil coming out of those lines:


I took this picture after the first road test, when I discovered that the rocker box soldered joint had failed - poor penetration caused by bad fluxing or low heat:



From the beginning of the rebuild, my Four has exhibited the same behaviour with respect to the oil pressure, namely that it will show about 55 psi cold, idling or on the road - governed by the relief valve. This drops to about 25 psi at 40 mph when really hot, and about 10 psi at idle - all this on Penrite 40/70.


Now that I have the rocker box/pressure gauge oil lines the right way round, its completely changed. Same oil, but now I see 60-65 psi cold, and about 50 hot; this drops to 25 psi at a hot idle.

I'm a happy chap. I might go back to a lighter oil, just so I can kick it over in the winter without a hernia.

7 comments:

  1. how do you install a gage on a 1955 MK 2 ?please?

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  2. I think I would break in to the oil feed line to the rocker with a tee, near the cylinder head. You would need to arrange a flexible pipe to connect into that tee to hook up your gauge, if you were to mount it on the handlebars; you could use a copper pipe if the gauge were mounted on the frame or in the tank.

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  3. Excellent blog, thanks for creating it. I have a 1952 Mark 1 Square Four, and it's always had the identical low oil pressure syndrome you've described. It was a Eureka moment to read this post - I immediately checked my feed pipes, and find the larger one goes to the rockers. It was configured this way when I bought it, and as you note it seems sensible - so I never questioned it.

    Couple of questions:

    - Have you verified, somehow, that the small pipe to the rockers is actually the official factory configuration?

    - I'm thinking of making a 1/8" jet and inserting it into the rocker feed union at the head (why didn't the factory just make this fitting 1/8"?). Might be easier than reconfiguring the pipes. Thoughts?

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  4. Hello Charlie, after reinstalling my Solex after a dismal failure trying a mki concentric carb, I am again referring back to your blog for a low oil pressure at idle, when hot.
    If I summarise what I read since 2013, I see that, apart from copper washers, and the Oil RV spring change, the main improvement seems to be the correct oil flow to the rockers and to the manometer.
    I'll be doing this shortly to improve my present 10psi at hot idle using 20/50.
    However, if you have time, could you let us know which oil viscosity you are presently using and what idle pressure this is giving ?

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    Replies
    1. Sure. Currently using a cheap 20W/50, which shows around 50 psi idling cold. This can go as low as 15 psi after a long (60 miles) run on a hot (in the UK) summer day.

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  5. Many thanks. I'm now on an elect. over consumption which i suspect is just the main light bulb power. After that back to the oil pressure issue.

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