I've got a bit of a puzzler, and I thought maybe I should post it here and see what people think.
I have a 72 combat (bike #1) I bought last year, and over a few months went over just about everything and was getting it together for a vintage ride in June. I put a few hundred miles on it, and was having some issues, so I went had a shop redo the head, replacing everything. I put the new head on and it fired up first kick and ran perfectly.
I put a few hundred more miles on it to shake it down, and had everything working beautiful. The last shakedown ride before the event, it threw a rod. (Much later, I took it apart and the oil pump is in pretty bad shape.)
I have a second combat engine (bike #2), of unknown, but supposedly good condition. I have the receipt for an engine rebuild, but unknown mileage, if any. Three days before the event, I figure what the hell, I'm going for it. So I pull the blown up engine out of bike 1, and pull the engine out of bike 2.
I take the "new" head off bike 1, and the two valves on the thrown cylinder are slightly bent. The guides look good, so I replace the valves and put head 1 on the bottom of engine 2. Engine 2 looks like it's nearly brand new. Minimal carbon, and the bores still have the cross hatching.
I put engine 2 into bike 1, get everything together, and without even touching the carbs, it fires up literally on the first kick, and idles beautifully.
Now the problem: riding it around the block, if I got it warmed up and rode it for any length of time over 3000rpm it would "seize" and lock up the rear wheel. I could pull in the clutch and coast, and if I let out the clutch to try and bump it, it was still locked up. Shutting it off, then I could kick it over and it would start again.
I tested this by just revving it with the clutch in, and it stalled at about 3000rpm.
(So I ended up riding a different bike on the vintage ride.)
My first thought was that the pistons were soft seizing in the bores.
I finally had a chance to take it apart this past weekend. The oil pump is practically new. And after pulling the head, the cylinder bores look nearly perfect. No evidence of scoring or wear at all. I measured them with a bore gauge and they're dead even top to bottom, and both sides are the same.
I haven't had a chance to pull the rest of it apart, but now I'm stumped.
If the pistons were seizing shouldn't there be wear on the bores?
The problem has something to do with heat and rpms. What else could make an engine seize?
I'm ruling out drivetrain and primary, because I know all of that to be working.
So, before pull the barrels and split the cases, any suggestions for things to look for?
thanks,
mk
I have a 72 combat (bike #1) I bought last year, and over a few months went over just about everything and was getting it together for a vintage ride in June. I put a few hundred miles on it, and was having some issues, so I went had a shop redo the head, replacing everything. I put the new head on and it fired up first kick and ran perfectly.
I put a few hundred more miles on it to shake it down, and had everything working beautiful. The last shakedown ride before the event, it threw a rod. (Much later, I took it apart and the oil pump is in pretty bad shape.)
I have a second combat engine (bike #2), of unknown, but supposedly good condition. I have the receipt for an engine rebuild, but unknown mileage, if any. Three days before the event, I figure what the hell, I'm going for it. So I pull the blown up engine out of bike 1, and pull the engine out of bike 2.
I take the "new" head off bike 1, and the two valves on the thrown cylinder are slightly bent. The guides look good, so I replace the valves and put head 1 on the bottom of engine 2. Engine 2 looks like it's nearly brand new. Minimal carbon, and the bores still have the cross hatching.
I put engine 2 into bike 1, get everything together, and without even touching the carbs, it fires up literally on the first kick, and idles beautifully.
Now the problem: riding it around the block, if I got it warmed up and rode it for any length of time over 3000rpm it would "seize" and lock up the rear wheel. I could pull in the clutch and coast, and if I let out the clutch to try and bump it, it was still locked up. Shutting it off, then I could kick it over and it would start again.
I tested this by just revving it with the clutch in, and it stalled at about 3000rpm.
(So I ended up riding a different bike on the vintage ride.)
My first thought was that the pistons were soft seizing in the bores.
I finally had a chance to take it apart this past weekend. The oil pump is practically new. And after pulling the head, the cylinder bores look nearly perfect. No evidence of scoring or wear at all. I measured them with a bore gauge and they're dead even top to bottom, and both sides are the same.
I haven't had a chance to pull the rest of it apart, but now I'm stumped.
If the pistons were seizing shouldn't there be wear on the bores?
The problem has something to do with heat and rpms. What else could make an engine seize?
I'm ruling out drivetrain and primary, because I know all of that to be working.
So, before pull the barrels and split the cases, any suggestions for things to look for?
thanks,
mk