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Back Firing
- Neotrion
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- savedrider
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- 1975 Z1-B 900
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Get right or get left! <*{{{><
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- GargantuChet
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Also, I can't stress how useful my Clymer manual has been when trying to test different components (including my coils).
Timing is worth checking, as good spark at the wrong time is as useless as bad spark at the right time.
Sometimes observations can help you to decide what to look at first. If the two cylinders which blacken your plugs happen to share a coil, I'd look at electrical issues first. Get a multimeter and make sure that you have good connectivity between the distributor (under the points cover) and your coils. Check the coils themselves. Make sure that there's connectivity between the ends of the plug wires through the coils (it'll be tens of thousands of ohms) -- Clymer will help you with testing the coil. There are many things that can go wrong. Your points may be bad/old/dirty/whatever, there may be several connectors between the distributor and the coil which can come apart (one came out on my bike and I sometimes wasn't getting spark), the plug caps (the very end of the plug wires -- they screw on) can corrode internally, and that's just the start.
If the two cylinders which are blackening plugs don't share a coil, I'd start with fuel delivery. Make sure your carbs are synched correctly -- you can build a homemade manometer with a $3 stretch of 3/16" ID clear tubing from Home Depot and some ATF. Use it to see if your carbs are in sync (between a "good" and a "bad" one).
Just a start, but don't get discouraged. You'll be glad when the bike is running as well as it should!
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- ~DW~
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I can recheck the timing tomorrow to make sure something didn't slip when I was resetting the cams. I was very carefull to make sure I left the T right on the mark when I got the cams adjusted correctly. I did notice that when the T was on the mark, the oval part of the metal was past the sensor on the pick up coil by about 3 degrees or so. Should the oval be right on it when the crank case and the mark are at T?
Yes, that's correct. It's pointed directly @ the sensor when the engine fires ("F" mark)
So, when you checked your valve clearances, did you have to change any shims? and when you torqued down your cam-cap bolts did you find any stripped or loose? how did the cam bearings look ?
Reason I ask all this is because I just went thru what you are doing. I found 3 loose cam cap bolts, and stripped one out myself ! Discovered if the c-cap bolts (all of them) are not drawn down slowly/evenly the cam lobes that are pointed down will be pushing on the valves and have an unequal pressure on the cam caps as you tighten them. They only take 12 ft pounds of torque.
Anyway, my problem was zero valve clerance on my intake valves, even tho I had pretty good compression, also my cam chain had run out of tensioner pressure (streched beyond the point where the auto tensioner could no longer push the cam chain tight).
If you have a lot of miles on the engine and an automatic c-chain tensioner you may need a "APE" aftermarket adjustable cam chain tensioner, that allows you to get the c-chain tight.
With the valve cover off and the spark plugs pulled, crank the engine w/the starter, watch the c-chain action, should be tight with no slack, smooth and no bounce.
Backfiring out the muffler ? big bangs ? can you get your palm (or a piece of thin cardboard) over a carb intake while its cranking? you should feel suction. If it pushes gas or air out? The intake valves (clearance) is too tight and/or the valves/seats are shot.
Post edited by: ~DW~, at: 2005/10/16 00:10
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- Neotrion
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- ~DW~
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"I don't think 2 and 3 share a common coil"
Your bike is a 4 cylinder, right?
Mine is also and the left coil supply's spark to cylinder's number 1 and 4.
The right coil supplys spark to cylinder's number 2 and 3.
Post edited by: ~DW~, at: 2005/10/16 00:35
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- GargantuChet
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Good luck!
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- GargantuChet
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Good luck!
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- Neotrion
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- BSKZ650
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77 kz650, owned for over 25 years
77 ltd1000, current rider
76 kz900, just waiting
73 z1,, gonna restore this one
piglet, leggero harley davidson
SR, Ride captian, S.E.Texas Patriot Guard Riders.. AKA KawaBob
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- Snakebyte
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- GargantuChet
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When I drive back home today, I will see about testing the coils. How hard are they to get these days? I do remember testing them and I think the spark was blue, but I will check the coil either way for those intermitant failures.
As hard as checking out Z1 or Bike Bandit . Z1 has a great reputation, and Bike Bandit is REALLY easy to search once you've told the website which bike you have. The hardest part is shelling out the dough!
I'm not sure about your coil, but on my 650 I believe that the resistance was 23k ohms between the ends of the spark plug wires, and 4 ohms between the wires feeding it (yellow and black or green depending on which coil). Of course, you should let the Clymer manual be your guide, but if your numbers are anywhere close to those I wouldn't suspect the coil.
G'luck!
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