I'm 66 tomorrow! I was hoping for a 'Colin Rosette' on my birthday.
My first Lambretta was a pain but I found the knack, my second was dead easy unless flooded then a pain all the time. My third was tricky, but would re-start really well and run well too, but everything was fresh, cylinder, piston, rings, bearings, seals etc etc.
Right, this bike:
I will try this afternoon the petrol down the hole again since I know the sparks are there at the right time.
Good result or bad, I'll try the 1/8 throttle, no choke. The big Chinese carb has a modern choke flap that all but covers the inlet diameter when fully applied.
If all this fails (and it has in the past) then I see the next move is to remove the engine, split the lot and have the cases machined for lip seals or better still, O rings.
Bonus is I can make them on my trusty Drummond lathe.
Well, the last 10 mins have been amusing.
Neat fuel done the hole.
nothing, but a hint sometimes it just might fire. After that 1/8 throttle, ful to carb connected, no choke, nowt
Pause for a swear or three, fuel down the hole, each time about a level tea spoon full, and nothing. Removed the fuel from the carb, so carb is full.
Kicked it over about 10 times and it fired and ran beautifully, no fuel to carb just fuel in the lower crank case from the spoon fulls previously. It revved to command, ran for about 1 minute sounding nice and 2 stroke and petered -out as the bowl was dry by this time.
Exhaust at the head leaks, and a black oil was leaking.
This all focuses on the mixture?
When the conditions are right it runs, when all the essentials are in-line it will start and run well.
Is this big Chinese carb simply too rich for it?
Will try the Villiers carb now and see what happens.I think the O ring will be more effective.
Here is the felt seal on the clutch side and the brass bush on the mag side. I can have an insert made to substitute it with an O ring in the same place as the felt.
And similarly, I can remove the brass bush with the helix machined in it's bore and insert another but with an O ring in it's length.