Any time you replace a piston and rings or a new cylinder your rings will have to seat. Seat mean wear of the little imperfections on the rings and cylinder so you have constant contact between the two.
What I am getting at is if I am correct and all of the issues can be caused by a defective muffler then maybe I can get it replaced without spending more money, if I am wrong about what I think may have happened then I have to buy a new one, I would love to put the cap on my old but the screw that cap nut screws on to broke this is why I bought the new one.could be a defective muffler, or some small critter crawled in and made a nest in it, or, or, or
point is , try to clean it out or just replace it (or put its end cap on the old one)
The muffler from my vendors costs 24.95. I have not found one cheaper anywhere.If I am correct and I believe I am that defective muffler cost me hundreds of dollars.if you have a vendor that will replace a muffler, then he's probably charging too much in the first place
I believe that the threads were weak it's the only thing that makes sense. I bought the muffler I installed and I started having problems right away. I chalked it up to the muffler being new and needing to be broke in.I wish you luck with that.
I doubt even a totally plugged muffler could rip a plug out of the head - I'd guess you cross-threaded it at some point. I'd also guess the lack of power to be due to scoring on the cylinder wall due to pieces of the damaged threads getting caught in the rings and dragged by the piston. Just a guess tho.
Let me explain the day the plug popped I bought a torque wrench I torqued the head down to it's recommend settings then when I went to start it the plug popped. I ordered the rebuild kit which kicked off this thread and have been chasing a problem loss of speed loss of power now a no start unless I remove that muffler.The muffler couldn't cause the plug to blow out, the compression did. If the engine ran at all exhaust was escaping , the head probably had bad threads from the start. Which plug were you running? The stock kit plug sometimes fit a little loose.
The muffler is plugged that's not in question anymore, I want to know if a plugged muffler can pop a weakened plug and if not then whatAs Greg said the muffler couldn't make the plug 'pop', the head must have had a weak thread.
Put a garden hose in the inlet of your old muffler, it will soon tell you if it is blocked.
A Squish test is easy to do to check piston head clearance.
What was the old plug?Let me explain the day the plug popped I bought a torque wrench I torqued the head down to it's recommend settings then when I went to start it the plug popped.