Second picture was after I heated the cylinder and allowed the valve to close to get the springs off. nothing particular about the burn pattern? absolutely no carbon in the middle of the combustion chamber.Pic one shows left valve closed, right valve stuck open, yet pic 2 shows both valves closed?
In photos #1 and #3, is that a crack at the spark plug boss ?The valve guide was carbon-ed up bad enough I had to drive the valve out with a 2 pound sledge.
That messed up the guide so bad I threw the cylinder away, the bore wasn't that good either.
I have better cylinders to rebuild than this one.
no. just a camera glitch.In photos #1 and #3, is that a crack at the spark plug boss ?
no just black carbon from burning auto.Is this an optical illusion from pic2; looks like the grand canyon!
That cylinder is already thrown away what else would ya do with it?Do ya still need us to tell ya what to do wit dat?
Make another lamp.That cylinder is already thrown away what else would ya do with it?
call the FSDO....for coffee?That cylinder is already thrown away what else would ya do with it?
It is my belief that the use of auto fuel allowed very hard carbon to build up on the valve stem. This made it impossible to remove the valve. I've seen it before but not this bad.So, caboned up. Due to using Mogas or just too rich?
Doesn't work like that.. ya got to have a badge to get near their coffee mess.call the FSDO....for coffee?
It is my belief that the use of auto fuel allowed very hard carbon to build up on the valve stem. This made it impossible to remove the valve. I've seen it before but not this bad.
This seems to be one of those chicken or the egg syndromes. I wouldn't expect a valve guide with the proper clearance would allow enough carbon to build up to cause a sticky valve. So what happened first? Carbon buildup or valve guide wear that left enough space for the carbon to build up?
What was the last fuel that got run through the engine? Unleaded or leaded? I had a valve stick on me in a Continental powered airplane that I fueled with 100LL after it had run hundreds of trouble free hours on unleaded car gas. It may have just been coincidental but I think the fuel was a contributing factor.