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British Bikes / Re: Troubleshooting a JAP Special
« Last post by Rockburner on Today at 09:55:09 AM »I think things are going well... (and a lot faster now the weather is warming up!)
So - last night I got another couple of hours in the shed and....
Dribbled a bit of oil into the cylinder to help the initial ring seal and checking of compression

I got the engine spinning a bit by hand and then wiped most of the excess that had gathered at the top of the barrel.
Then it was time for some heat!

The last time I tried quenching copper it was some brake-line crush seals and I massively over-did it and turned them into slag....
So this time I played the heat over the gasket until I had a glow chasing the heat around the ring, then chucked it straight into the water

I only did one side, mainly because I really did NOT want to over-heat the thing and warp it out of shape, so, we'll see how it goes. If it starts blowing very quickly... at least I now know how to get at it.
Shiny side up!

Buttoned up again.

I did try rotating the engine with my thumb stuck over the plug hole..... and there's definitely compression there! Whether there's enough compression only time will tell....
So - time to assemble the rocker box:
All the bits:

First I cleaned up the threads for the rocker adjusters:

Stuck the cap-heads on the valve stems : (This is exactly the sort of thing I would forget if I hadn't put ALL the parts into little trays of associated parts, as seen above, I would highly recommend this practise if you're doing a job like this).

The exhaust rocker had a little bit of corrosion on it's shaft, (phnarr), so I gave the shaft a little polish (ooer!). The inlet seemed fine.


Assembly of the rocker shaft with all their annoying little roller pins in situ:

I dribbled a little bit of oil into the roller-pin bearing assemblies to get them started, they definitely felt dry when I was first checking their movement.
As described earlier in the thread: the Rocker box assembly is done by pushing the bearing liner for the outboard (push-rod-side) as far out as it will go, fitting the top-cover of the box, then donig up tight ONLY the inboard screws, so the inboard bearling line is locked in place, and the outboard liner is "just" moveable ... then screwing the outer cover on, and the bosses on the inside of the outer cover then push the rocker arm into the box: pushing the outboard liner into the box just enough. This means the rocker arm "end-play" is automatically controlled and is hopefully minimised. I may actually re-do this process with a lot more photos next time I'm in the shed just to make sure I've done it right....
First thing to go on is the lower halves of the valve-covers.

I had to spend a bit of time trying to figure out where the washers on the bolts that hold the rocker box to the head (only 2 of em!) were supposed to go. I didn't make an exact note of this when I disassembled the bike (d'oh!) but I think I worked it out eventually. The complication is that there's also a bracket fitted above the rocker box that attaches to a head-steady which bolts to the bike's frame at the headstock, so I was trying to figure out if there should be a washer under the bracket, or 2 above.... I'm pretty sure there's no washer under the rocker box, it mates directly to the top of the head.
And that is where I ran out of time for the evening. :roll:
I'm currently pondering the idea of trying to seal the valve gear with the 3Bond - it's not designed to be sealed (it's a shale-track engine, weeping oil all over the place is a design feature), so it's a problematic process at best. Especially since I may well be placing and removing things repeatedly....
Food for thought over the weekend anyway.
NEXT TIME: Rocker box fitting and TIMING! (well, hopefully!)
So - last night I got another couple of hours in the shed and....
Dribbled a bit of oil into the cylinder to help the initial ring seal and checking of compression

I got the engine spinning a bit by hand and then wiped most of the excess that had gathered at the top of the barrel.
Then it was time for some heat!

The last time I tried quenching copper it was some brake-line crush seals and I massively over-did it and turned them into slag....
So this time I played the heat over the gasket until I had a glow chasing the heat around the ring, then chucked it straight into the water

I only did one side, mainly because I really did NOT want to over-heat the thing and warp it out of shape, so, we'll see how it goes. If it starts blowing very quickly... at least I now know how to get at it.

Shiny side up!

Buttoned up again.

I did try rotating the engine with my thumb stuck over the plug hole..... and there's definitely compression there! Whether there's enough compression only time will tell....
So - time to assemble the rocker box:
All the bits:

First I cleaned up the threads for the rocker adjusters:

Stuck the cap-heads on the valve stems : (This is exactly the sort of thing I would forget if I hadn't put ALL the parts into little trays of associated parts, as seen above, I would highly recommend this practise if you're doing a job like this).

The exhaust rocker had a little bit of corrosion on it's shaft, (phnarr), so I gave the shaft a little polish (ooer!). The inlet seemed fine.


Assembly of the rocker shaft with all their annoying little roller pins in situ:

I dribbled a little bit of oil into the roller-pin bearing assemblies to get them started, they definitely felt dry when I was first checking their movement.
As described earlier in the thread: the Rocker box assembly is done by pushing the bearing liner for the outboard (push-rod-side) as far out as it will go, fitting the top-cover of the box, then donig up tight ONLY the inboard screws, so the inboard bearling line is locked in place, and the outboard liner is "just" moveable ... then screwing the outer cover on, and the bosses on the inside of the outer cover then push the rocker arm into the box: pushing the outboard liner into the box just enough. This means the rocker arm "end-play" is automatically controlled and is hopefully minimised. I may actually re-do this process with a lot more photos next time I'm in the shed just to make sure I've done it right....
First thing to go on is the lower halves of the valve-covers.

I had to spend a bit of time trying to figure out where the washers on the bolts that hold the rocker box to the head (only 2 of em!) were supposed to go. I didn't make an exact note of this when I disassembled the bike (d'oh!) but I think I worked it out eventually. The complication is that there's also a bracket fitted above the rocker box that attaches to a head-steady which bolts to the bike's frame at the headstock, so I was trying to figure out if there should be a washer under the bracket, or 2 above.... I'm pretty sure there's no washer under the rocker box, it mates directly to the top of the head.
And that is where I ran out of time for the evening. :roll:
I'm currently pondering the idea of trying to seal the valve gear with the 3Bond - it's not designed to be sealed (it's a shale-track engine, weeping oil all over the place is a design feature), so it's a problematic process at best. Especially since I may well be placing and removing things repeatedly....
Food for thought over the weekend anyway.
NEXT TIME: Rocker box fitting and TIMING! (well, hopefully!)
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