Hi guys, I've got an irritating problem with my cb750 k4 that I haven't been able to solve for some time now.
If I ride my bike everyday, it runs and starts perfectly. No smoke at start-up, good power.
If I don't ride it for a few days, it is pretty hard to get it started. Once it does start, it'll smoke a bit, then clear up and run smooth.
If I leave it for a week, it will barely start. When it does start running, it is often not on all 4 cylinders. When I start to ride it a block or two, the cylinders that aren't firing suddenly start firing and it's back to normal.
If I leave it longer than that, it will not start, unless I replace/clean the plugs.
When I remove the plugs, they are wet and black - not wet with gas, it's definitely oil.
I tried cleaning the carbs several times first thinking it was a carb issue, but nope. All clean with new jets/gaskets/etc. I pulled the plugs to check for spark when all cylinders weren't firing, and I'd have some wet plugs with no spark. When I replace the plug, it's back to a strong spark.
Also worth noting, when some cylinders don't fire at start-up, it varies which cylinders fire and which don't. IE: Some days cylinder 4 is dead. Other days its 2 and 3, and so on.
Other details on the bike: It has a Dyna-S e-ignition, clean carbs, the battery is 1-year old and I keep it charged up. This problem only started in the fall. Before that, I rode it around 10K km this season without issue.
It seems clear to me that oil is slowly dripping onto the plugs as it sits. It's not enough to wet the plugs badly over a day or two, but the longer it sits, the more oil drips onto the plugs. I've never opened up an engine before, but I understand the exhaust valves are directly overhead the plugs, yes? Could they be leaking oil onto the plugs?
And second question, would it then be the valve seals, the valves themselves, or the valve guides causing the issue? Potentially all? I'd really rather not have to pull the head off and I've read you can replace the seals by only removing the cam cover by using compressed air to keep the valves closed, correct? Any tips or advice would be great. It's winter here now, so I've got about two months of shop time available to fix this before spring hits...