My engine seems to be overheating, the muffler is hot(scorching, and the engine head itself seems more hot then it should be) this is not a new engine, and i cannot idle i pop the clutch and it shuts off right away. do i need to tune the carb?
If smoke is coming from the head, sounds like that is your big leak there. Are you using acorn nuts on the head bolts? If so, it has been seen that these can bottom out before putting enough torque on the head. They should be replaced with regular nuts to avoid this. Or at very least, and a washer under the acorn nuts to give them a little more grab room.yes, when i pull the handle in to stop the engine it just dies right away no idle, and smoke seems to come out of the engine head when i accelerate too, i will try to adjust the screw but is turning the screw right make it leaner? also i think there might be an air leak because when i throttle down completely the engine still revs like im giving it juice even though im not, how does one find an air leak? thanks alot for the help man!
The first part makes sense because you raise the throttle slide to allow just enough air to generate just enough power to keep the engine parts rotating.I know people say the needle affects off-idle to 3/4 throttle, but adusting mine on my NT carb definitely affected my idle too.
And with the stock head, these little guys run pretty hot. There is a thread around here where people compare running temps. You should pick up a cheap infrared thermometer (or borrow one if you do not have one) and check your head temps to see if they are in line with the others. Running lean can cause extra heat, maybe you have an air leak? That would explain your idle issues too.
the bike still has alot of compression, and by horribly you mean the engine is pretty much shot and i should give up trying, lmao.... i just want a working bike, its one thing after another, first i find it hard to mount, now the engines f'd,fmlThanks for the pics. I am seeing a whole lot of oil, EVERYWHERE. I would still replace the acorn nuts. If you are losing compression and getting leaks at the head, the bike could still run, just horribly.
And I mentioned in your other thread, the "crack" in the piston ring, at least the one I can see clearly, looks like the regular split in the ring which fits over the locator pin on the piston. The rings are split, and form a circle when compressed. There should be a tiny locator in in each groove for the piston rings, the ring cutouts go over that pin.
I mean that it would run horribly while it was leaking, but fine after the leak was fixed.the bike still has alot of compression, and by horribly you mean the engine is pretty much shot and i should give up trying, lmao.... i just want a working bike, its one thing after another, first i find it hard to mount, now the engines f'd,fml
The first thing I would do, since you already have the head and cylinder off, is lap the mating surfaces smooth. You can search for how to do it on this site, there are tons of posts on making them smooth to help eliminate head leaks.so how do i find/fix the leak?
can you send me a link for smoothing the mating surfaces, or could i just use sandpaper to do it? i have no way of using a machine shop or anything like that to smooth it out so sandpaper is my only option in smoothing it out, and could you possibly send me a pic of the nuts i should use? and can i clean the gunk off of the piston,engine,cylinder head with wd40? the previous owner told me to run it at 20:1. but i have yet to fill a tank because i need a fuel on off valve...thanks for the help btw. also i think you or someone else said that the rings need to go a certain way, do you have any instructions or examples for me to use so i dont put them in the wrong way and blow my engine. lmao,thanks.The first thing I would do, since you already have the head and cylinder off, is lap the mating surfaces smooth. You can search for how to do it on this site, there are tons of posts on making them smooth to help eliminate head leaks.
Then use regular or shouldered nuts instead of acorn nuts when reinstalling the head.
After everything is buttoned up and the engine is running (preferably idling, but as low an rpm as possible at first) spray various areas of the motor with WD40 or carb cleaner. If there is a leak and the spray gets sucked in, it should affect the rpms. If so, you found a leak.
Common places for leaks are at the head, intake manifold where it meets the cylinder, intake manifold where it meets the carb, and at the crank seals on the clutch or magneto side.
Good luck!
Also, what oil ratio are you running, and what plug?
20:1 is way to high for a motor that is already broken in. You should be closer to 32:1 if you are using regular or synthetic air cooled 2-stroke oil. Some people go with less, but 32:1 seems pretty safe. That would help explain all the gunk in there.can you send me a link for smoothing the mating surfaces, or could i just use sandpaper to do it? i have no way of using a machine shop or anything like that to smooth it out so sandpaper is my only option in smoothing it out, and could you possibly send me a pic of the nuts i should use? and can i clean the gunk off of the piston,engine,cylinder head with wd40? the previous owner told me to run it at 20:1. but i have yet to fill a tank because i need a fuel on off valve...thanks for the help btw. also i think you or someone else said that the rings need to go a certain way, do you have any instructions or examples for me to use so i dont put them in the wrong way and blow my engine. lmao,thanks.
Cool, that looks to be a B6HS equivalent.it an ngk l86c, and i do not see the pins you were talking about in the cylinder head.