New guy from Argentina!

GoldenMotor.com

andyburgos

New Member
Feb 6, 2012
3
0
0
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Hello everyone!
My name is Andrés, and I live in Argentina. I just bought my first bicycle engine, a 48 cc "golden kit" :confused: chinese engine: I am very afraid of motorbikes, but I needed a light, reliable, and easy (ed: cheap) to mantain vehicle. I must say this is it! Parts are very inexpensive, maintanance is very simple, and the reaction and speed of this little engine are surprisingly good for town cruising (specially considering my 1.85 m and 90 kg -180 pounds- weight! haha), it can even take me over bridges without any issue. I love this puppy, and it´s near zero fuel consumption... compared to my 1996 Ford Escort RS, this is the glory! :p
I also wanted to thank everyone in the forum, since reading some of the posts was extremely useful during the assembly of my bike, especially the carburator`s dissasembly guide (L).
I´ve used the search option for a lot of topics, but i would like to ask a few questions since very few people have motorized bikes in my country (there isn´t even a legislation for this kind of vehicles...) and I don´t have a "comparison point" for this regards...
1) How can I know if my engine is running lean? I read in this forum that running lean can overheat the engine, melting the piston´s head... and I would certainly NOT like seeing that in a u$170 engine kit (half a month`s salary :p)! At first I assembled the engine without the E-Clip in the carburator`s throttle slide and it kept "spitting" gas when accelerating. After reading the dissasembly guide I put the C-Washer (my kit did not have an E-Clip, but the carburator is the same with the "tickler" and the idle screw) in the 3º position from up to down (this should be the 2º richer setting, right?) and now it doesn´t leak anymore. Power is the same as before, engine sound has changed a little, so... how can I know if the setting is right?
2) What´s the correct tension for the chain? I put it in a setting where you can move it a little if you press with your finger. Is that correct or it must be very hard?
3) I´ve had a rough time with the exhaust system... first one of the (cheaply built) screws got cut when I was adjusting it, and then I lost the exhaust tip (the round shaped one with the little tube at the end) in my way home from my GF´s... Other than the very loud noise and the (small) burnt gas leak in the exhaust´s manyfold base, is this dangerous to use or bad for the engine?
4) How often should I check my spark plug´s state? My bicycle´s frame is pretty lousy (plain cheap mountain bike) so there´s no space for removing the spark plug without taking the engine outside the frame, so that´s quite a hastle :p

Thank you very much for your time, and I beg your pardon if I messed up with some part´s name... my english is second language, haha.
Best regards,
Andy, from Buenos Aires
 
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Fulltimer

New Member
Aug 13, 2010
1,321
3
0
77
Saint Augustine, FL
Welcome to the forum! If I remember right you want about 1/4" sag in the chain. If the chain is tight it will wear out soon. Would putting a slant head on your motor help with changing the spark plug?

Terry
PS: Don't worry about your English. Your doing fine.
 

andyburgos

New Member
Feb 6, 2012
3
0
0
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Thank you very much, Terry. Just yesterday I happened to cut my chain (the sprocker got loose, thus driving the chain to the wheel ¬¬ I´ll be more carefull about it from now on) and I had to rebuild it, so I used your advise to tighten it properly :)
What is a "slant head"? We don´t have so many spare parts available as I see some people in the forum do (in my country, I mean), but it would certainly be great to replace the spark plug without removing the whole engine :p
Best regards,
Andy
PS: is a "slant head" a tool with the shape of the "spark plug remover" included in the kit, but plain like a wrench? We call that "fixed keys" so it´s very imaginative from me, but maybe that´s what you mean :$
 
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