" I poured the oil directly into the engine block behind the piston head. "
Ahhhh...........................
Tom
Ahhhh...........................
Tom
OK, so this mystery finally got my attention!
Do you have 2-stroke or 4-stroke motors???
If you have 2-stroke where exactly in the MOTOR are you pouring the oil?
To be clear, with a 2-stroke motor you MIX the oil into the GAS, with a 4-stroke motor you pour the oil into the block. It's one or the other...
Reading this thread it seems to indicate you have a 2-stroke kit, but then you clearly say you poured oil into the block?
IMHO the best thing for you to do is give the most honest and accurate information to the good folks in the forum and they will help you figure things out. If you dance around the details we are at a loss to help you, and people will soon tire of it. If you don't know exactly what type of motor you have then the best thing to do is post a few pictures...
Good luck to you with your bikes....
if you dumped 1/2 cup of oil directly into the engine, the crank case is now full of oil, and this will hudrolock the motor and it can bend the connecting rod.I poured the oil directly into the engine block behind the piston head. I did this in a very liberal fashion. It lasted longer then all the other engines only stalling when I adjusted the idle screw on the carb. It was kinda bottoming out when I was comming to a stop so I wanted to adjust it.. then It hasn't started ever since. totally died on me. I might drain this one out and try to start it up again.. but I don't know if I should because I don't know why all the other engines stopped working in the first place. Again this was the last engine that stopped working all the other ones I was using proper oil mixtures.
If they are all two strokes, how did you pour oil into the engine. There is no oil plug or anything to pour oil into behind the "piston head"? How did you get oil into the engine? Inquiring minds want to know. Pictures would help immensely....I have 4 engines total, all are 2 stroke 80CC motors. One is a china gas engine I got from an Ebay user in Canada. The parts are kinda different in size on that one compared to the other ones. That was the first one to stall. That one I used the proper oil mixture until it stalled. However it did stall after filling up at the gas station about 2 miles down the road. Still that shouldn't be a reason for it to stall right away. The other 3 are 2 stroke 80CC Raw Motors.
When I said I poured the oil into the engine block on one of the engines I'm talking about the part behind the piston head. Not on top of the engine. I should say basically into the engine compartment itself. This should still be considerd untested and the engine did die on me later...I did this to keep the engine cool and lubed. I believe I still went back to using the proper oil mixture with this one aswell.. So still no reason for it to die on me.
So.. yes very hard for me to deal with all of these engines going out right now. Plus someone stole some of my parts off the bike... not to mention other problems with having to bend the tail pipe that came up later.
I swear purchasing power in America is god awful right now! This country is going to ****! I originally wanted to buy the beach Cruisers and engines to fit all from one site..but they didn't ship to California. Anyway..
Please give me your input on what you think might fix this stalling problem.
I am thinking he used the hole under the clutch cable stay, where you access the internal clutch spring. If so, that would thankfully mean that the oil did not actually get into the crankcase since this is a separate compartment.If they are all two strokes, how did you pour oil into the engine. There is no oil plug or anything to pour oil into behind the "piston head"? How did you get oil into the engine? Inquiring minds want to know. Pictures would help immensely....
I poured the oil directly into the engine block behind the piston head. I did this in a very liberal fashion. It lasted longer then all the other engines only stalling when I adjusted the idle screw on the carb. It was kinda bottoming out when I was comming to a stop so I wanted to adjust it.. then It hasn't started ever since. totally died on me. I might drain this one out and try to start it up again.. but I don't know if I should because I don't know why all the other engines stopped working in the first place. Again this was the last engine that stopped working all the other ones I was using proper oil mixtures.
he said behind the piston head (to me, this means the back of the cylinder) possibly into the carb or intake manifold.I am thinking he used the hole under the clutch cable stay, where you access the internal clutch spring. If so, that would thankfully mean that the oil did not actually get into the crankcase since this is a separate compartment.
my rule of thumb has always been....dont try and build to sell unless you build the best one in town....that goes for anything.... i dunno just me i guess
if you have anything hooked to the white wire (like a headlight) the engine will run for a little while and then die. the magneto will become too weak because it gets over worked trying to fire the spark plug and run a headlight.
hooking a light to the white wire steals power from the magneto and it will make the magneto weak enough to not give enough spark to fire the fuel.
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ok, i tend to agree with you about using an led.Sorry, but this simply is not 100% true. While it is true that some lights will draw too much power and rob spark, it is simply a matter of using a light that will not overdraw power. LED lights tend to draw way less energy than incandescent lights, so if you use a 6v 3w LED light, you can run it off the white wire. I have been using a 150 lumen flashlight off the white wire, but I dont know how to install a voltage regulator. I am ordering a 6v 3w, 270 lumen headlight with a built-in regulator, custom made by wonderful creations on ebay, designed for use on motorized bicycles. And I am not the only person using a lighting system that involves the white wire.
which is exactly why i would never even consider running incandescent lights off the white wire. the custom made light I am ordering is not that expensive, and it looks to be very high quality. $17 plus 5 for shipping, its 2 super bright led's, 270 lumens, built-in regulator, and its a sealed unit for weather resistance. $17 is not bad for the quality and the fact its custom made. better than anything I have seen for ht bikes so far, other than what people have built for themselves.ok, i tend to agree with you about using an led.
but most people don't buy a custom made light with leds in them off e-bay or anywhere else just because they are expensive (more expensive than a cheap chrome headlight with an incadesent bulb in it). most people don't think of using a flashlight either.
the majority of people will buy the cheap chrome light with a 6 volt incadesent bulb in it off e-bay.
they'll hook it to the white wire and expect it to work for a long time.
altho, a 6 volt incadesent bulb may work for a little while, but eventually the magneto will get weak enough to make the engine not run with the light hooked up.
I know, because this is what happened to me when i built my first bike.
my engine ran fine for a few days with the light hooked up and working and then out of the blue, it wouldn't run.
it wasn't getting enough power from the magneto or the light was acting as a kill switch.
as soon as i disconnected the light, the engine started and it has ran fine for the past 4 years.
I'm just saying that MOST people will opt for the cheap incandesent light on e-bay because all they hear is that you can run a headlight off of the white wire.
No one nails down the specifics that it has to be an xxx watt, xxx volt led light and possibly with a voltage regulator.
the majority of people look for the easiest, cheapest way to hook up a headlight, and 9 times out of 10, they go for the incadesent version.
then, they start having problems, the engine won't run, and they can't figure out why.
this has actually happened to a lot of people that go with an incadesent light.