Measure Twice,
That may well have been the reason it broke. It was like a popet valve in a way. You pulled down on the lever on the handle bar and that lifted one end of the lever on the engine so the other end could push down on the valve that went into the head to relieve the pressure. When the handle bar lever was let go the spring on the valve which was sitting on the outside of the head closed it and engine compression kept it close as well as the spring strength.
If the head had a major carbon build up the valve wouldn't open and the lever on the head would break where it pivoted. The oil mix was 16-1 I think so that didn't help
Our favorite way to decoke an engine was to run it a few miles and then come home and pull the muffler off and the air cleaner and a mix of 50% warm water and 50% alcohol into the carb with a turkey baster very slowly while you reved the engine wide open. Better still you tried to get someone to stand behind you so they got covered in the oily, greasy crap that flew out.
Younger brothers were good for at least once. After that they were pretty hard to suck in. You had to tell your parents that they walked behind you as you did it because those clothes were never going to be clean again. The side of the house too if you weren't really careful.
We took the muffler off so it didn't plug up.
The old D9 Cat dozer I ran for a while had a small gas motor called a pup motor that had a small rubber wheel on it. You had to start it first and after you warmed it up you had to push against a lever that moved the pup motor and the wheel up against an exposed part of the diesels fly wheel to turn it over so it would start.
The motor on the jet motor may have worked the same way. If it had what they call a flame out while in the air I think the pilot has a very short time to put the plane into a steep dive to get enough air into the turbines so that the fans in the engine could get up to speed so the engine will start or they have to jump.
They may have had an compressed air starter but I don't know for sure.
The little motor took an minute to spool up the engine so it must have had a lot of torque.
Steve.
That may well have been the reason it broke. It was like a popet valve in a way. You pulled down on the lever on the handle bar and that lifted one end of the lever on the engine so the other end could push down on the valve that went into the head to relieve the pressure. When the handle bar lever was let go the spring on the valve which was sitting on the outside of the head closed it and engine compression kept it close as well as the spring strength.
If the head had a major carbon build up the valve wouldn't open and the lever on the head would break where it pivoted. The oil mix was 16-1 I think so that didn't help
Our favorite way to decoke an engine was to run it a few miles and then come home and pull the muffler off and the air cleaner and a mix of 50% warm water and 50% alcohol into the carb with a turkey baster very slowly while you reved the engine wide open. Better still you tried to get someone to stand behind you so they got covered in the oily, greasy crap that flew out.
Younger brothers were good for at least once. After that they were pretty hard to suck in. You had to tell your parents that they walked behind you as you did it because those clothes were never going to be clean again. The side of the house too if you weren't really careful.
We took the muffler off so it didn't plug up.
The old D9 Cat dozer I ran for a while had a small gas motor called a pup motor that had a small rubber wheel on it. You had to start it first and after you warmed it up you had to push against a lever that moved the pup motor and the wheel up against an exposed part of the diesels fly wheel to turn it over so it would start.
The motor on the jet motor may have worked the same way. If it had what they call a flame out while in the air I think the pilot has a very short time to put the plane into a steep dive to get enough air into the turbines so that the fans in the engine could get up to speed so the engine will start or they have to jump.
They may have had an compressed air starter but I don't know for sure.
The little motor took an minute to spool up the engine so it must have had a lot of torque.
Steve.