Can we just drop the usual veil of the internet for a moment and let me talk on a personal level without any rancor intended on my part (slap me if I get maudlin) and not have to back everything right now with outside verification, although I can if you want.
If you will look at the time of the my post: 8:55am I had been up for 36 hours due to my wife having health problems and my continuing dealing with the after affects of a certain "little Asian war". It mostly effects my ability to get a good night sleep, sleep deprivation, the doctors call it (I do get some interesting dreams). It makes me giddy and I was just pulling your chain' after you posted the "plug chart". this forum and working on bikes is like therapy for me and helped. I got some sleep, so here goes.
This chart has been around since the '60, you would see it in every mechanics shop, and it was made for high mileage car engines to show the effects of mechanical problems with the engines. That's why I asked if there was oil on the threads of the plug; if the engine isn't in good mechanical condition, any plug reading is going to be false due to oil getting on the porcelain.
Snakeoil is right, use an oxygen analyzer and a dyno. But don't stop there; have the intake hooked-up to an a flow meter, use an electronic ignition analyzer, put electrodes all over the engine to monitor head temp etc, etc.
But to use plug reading as a way of tuning an older Honda engine is difficult even in the best of shops with all the technology you want to throw at it. And every time you do a plug reading it needs to be done Exactly the same way, same rider, take account of the air temp, humidity (yes, the flame front inside of the engine travels at different speeds just by changing the humidity) ect. through more variables then I want to get into right now.
The thing is (not so much for newer stuff with programmable computers and fuel injection) tuning used to be more of an art then a science: look at Pop's Yoshimura, back in the day:
http://clingonforlife.blogspot.com/2010 ... imura.html
I've seen videos of him at the race track and he's got his hands on the bike when it first starts, to see how it's warming up, he had some kind of steth-o-scope and listened all over the engine, when the rider came by for a test run he was right close to the track listening to it as it went by.
All the other tuners at the time had the same technology but he made it work better then most because he was an artist. Engines are just an air pump and has like a musical instrument, the need to be tuned in the intake track and exhaust pipe. I worked part time when in college for an electric organ tuner and it was half electronics and half having a good ear to be able to tune it (and no I never got that good at it---solid state killed his job like TV repair)
Not saying I don't look at plugs and can tell if it's too rich
or lean but it's a broad measure. If I have done my work right and EVERYTHING is up to factory specs then there shouldn't be any problem (that's after doing everything LM has on his tuning page too).
Steve, I do want to say I do appreciate what you have done around here especially in the electric/ignition side and your tutorials. Sometimes it does seem you post to threads (mostly in the mechanical section) without reading the whole thing (possible you speed read) or off the top of your head without double checking your facts. I was taught to speed read in high school through one of them 60's federal programs, and I had to teach my self later on to Slow down when reading technical books as I wasn't picking up all that was on the page.
For Christmas I was given the book "The man who saved Britain: a personal journey into the disturbing world of James Bond" By Simon Winder. Which is a look at Britain after the ww2 and "the trauma faced by Britain in the 40's and 50's after the loss of the British Empire" and how James Bond was one of the few high lights of that time. I never quite understood how much England had lost thru the war; I thought we had won the war together and were equal partners but as Britain was losing there empire America was increasing it's influence world wide---along with China and The USSR. So maybe this is where you get your acidic sense of humor which I like (even if a little strange:-)
I know I get too far off the subject a lot of times and tend to go on but I hope you all will forgive me.
Clarence
e3steve wrote:Clarence, far be it from me to challenge any of Newton's Laws of Physics. If you're serious, or being just plain argumentative, please read, and comprehend, my posts again.If you view the 'Common spark plug conditions' chart document (by clicking on it to open, then click again on the opened image to size it up) that I posted for you (in order to help), you'll see that none has anything other than a darkened body; and that is in spite of, and irrespective of, the colour and state of the electrodes or insulators. Not that it couldn't occur -- just that, in over forty years of playing with petrol engines, I've never seen such a phenomenon. Still, as I've always stated: 'every day's a schoolday!'. As always, I stand to be corrected.clarenceada wrote:I've never had much luck reading carbs; might as well be a pot of tea for all the good, looking at a bunch of smudge marks on the end of a plug does me.
If you're not serious, nor being just plain argumentative, please ignore the foregoing.....?