1962 Superhawk Restoration: Here I go
Ya have a lot of SCUFF on those pistons.
And a lot of carbon for only that amount of miles. How do the cylinders look. Any aluminum there. Probably would want to replace the rings. Did the engine ever over heat? ............lm
Scott, you are right that both valves should be shut at TDC on the firing stroke, but on the other TDC they should both be open slightly. 3mm sounds like a lot at TDC though. Are both valves open around TDC where the exhaust is closing and the intake opening?
Left to right should be the same but with a 180 degree crank, the cams are phased 90 degrees out left to right. I'm looking at a pair of cams and a sprocket here on the desk. The TDC marking on the right side of the sprocket is TDC on the right cylinder with both valves on overlap (slightly open). The left cylinder is at BDC and the exhaust valve is closed and the intake is fully open. One revolution later, right cylinder is at TDC on the firing stroke and the left is at BDC with the exhaust valve almost fully open. IS that what you are seeing? Try to slip a large flat bladed screwdriver in though the tappet inspection holes and lever down on the tappet adjuster screw. Do all 4 open and close smoothly with no stickiness? The noise is metal on metal and it's way louder than any CB72/77 I have heard running except the one that had valves and pistons getting intimate. Something is hitting something. Do you have a pic of the top of each piston? I'm interested in the valve pockets in particular
Is there any way that the valve clearances could have been excessive? It is possible to check them at the wrong place in the cycle and end up with too much clearance. On the bench, try to rotate the camshafts and when one valve is fully open, check the other valve on that same cylinder. I can't remember the stock clearances, but they should be somewhere around .004" to .006" I would guess. No way they were set to fractions of a mm and the conversion ended up a factor of ten out is there? I know that's unlikely, but we are searching for something odd.
I, for one, would very much like you to share, Ed. As would many others, I'm sure! Oil residue from storage/fabrication would burn off in minutes, surely(?), let alone miles. Oil in the exhaust header from the motor -- enough to cause exhaust smoke for, once again, more than minutes, would certainly be a lot of oil!? I have the feeling that you're 'testing' us here, me ol'mucker.! I'm no mechanical expert but, IMHO, I'm in total agreement with Ed. Carbon builds quickly when mineral oil combusts along with the induction charge. And the piston looks like it could've overheated and 'grabbed' in the bore; possibly too tight a rebore/honing tolerance? I don't see any blow-by, BTW. As for the clacking noise Scott, did you listen around the top end with a stethoscope probe or a 'stethoscrewdriver' to closer pinpoint the source?
I just read this again!
The pistons are NOS third over. The cylinders were honed just enough to warrant slightly larger pistons. I was very, very careful about the cam chain's installation; Did you not bore from .50 to .75 pistons? Just hone to ???????. ........lm
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