Packed the muffler with one of these stainless steel scrubbies. Fluffed it up and poked it to the top of the can with a long screwdriver. I picked up two 2-packs, but one scrubby was more than enough. I also cut the exhaust tube off the bottom of the cap because there was no room to push it back into the can.
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We'll see. It is mostly air in there. Easy enough to change it up if it is too restrictive. Remember, I doubled the number of holes in the tube and added a couple holes to the bottom cap.That's not going to work!!!
The muffler won't be able to breathe through all that!
BTW... The 5 large bolts only hold the chainring to the adapter. There are five 1/4in bolts that go through the spokes (on a circle if seven - skip instance numbers 2 and 6) and through the two-piece retainer.It looks interesting!!
What keeps the hub adapter locked into the hub to drive the wheel, (besides the five large bolts)?
That fix is very simple!Crank hits the exhaust. I think I will cut the exhaust pipe by the flange and rotate it so that the muffler discharges directly under the bike frame.
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That’s pretty trick and nice use of technology.Retaining ring print is almost done (9 hours). Two halves which interlock. 20mm thick, but honeycomb interior with only 20% infill. 3mm wall thickness.
This part will not see any torque from the engine. It is strictly to keep the chainring adapter full engaged with the hub. Will be secured by 1/4in bolts with deformed thread lock nuts.
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Finished. I took it out for a couple miles. Engine doesn't run smooth -- sounds like a hit and miss motor. Need to figure out if it is a fuel or spark issue. Spark plug is an E3-32. I replaced the boot with an MSD 90 degree non-resistor boot because the spring boot that came with the kit did not fit tightly on the plug. I am thinking fuel is the issue. I honed the mating surface on the cylinder where the carb attaches and made a new Felpro gasket. I am wondering about the janky clamp set up that attaches the carb -- maybe not sealing well?
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I'm running 16:1 with Stihl synthetic oil (this ratio was recommended in the instructions for the first tank - after that, it specifies 20:1). It does run a little better once it warms up. I was hoping that after running it a bit I could open it up and get it to even out, but nope.The bike's looking good!! & good job on that sprocket adapter!
As far as the poor performance... How are you mixing the gas & oil? (I would jump right in with 32:1)... Too much oil will cause poor performance
Another thing to consider; these engines need to get real hot before they start running good.
Also... they run better at higher RPMs; (so, trying to cruise it at low RPMs can cause that missing feeling that you're describing).
I'm running 16:1 with Stihl synthetic oil (this ratio was recommended in the instructions for the first tank - after that, it specifies 20:1). It does run a little better once it warms up. I was hoping that after running it a bit I could open it up and get it to even out, but nope.