It occured to me you never mentioned which spark plugs you're running? Maybe I missed it. If you're running the wrong plugs and they are on the cold side this will easily cause carbon build up and foul plugs.
I just posted this in another thread about plugs:
http://www.ngksparkplugs.com/tech_support/spark_plugs/p2.asp
Hi Duanob - I'm running what I understand are stock - D8EA plugs I believe. Whatever the manual states, and ordered through my local Honda dealer. I have the good fortune of dealing with a guy there who has a cb400F and loves these old bikes.
Here is the latest progress on the bike. I've made some big headway, and had a few setbacks.
I got the head back from Competition. They soda blasted it and boy was it CLEAN!! I had new APE guides put in and honed. The valves were fine, just cleaned up. I had the seats cut and then I lapped the valves in on my apartment kitchen table. I have an understanding woman
I cleaned the pistons with a brass wheel for the big carbon chunks, then scrubbed the whole surface with a scotchbrite pad and mineral spirits. It cleanup very well, but took some elbow grease. I had started with a gasket scraper, but it seemed to want to gouge the surface so I opted for something slow and steady and safe.
I oiled the valve stems, and the cylinder walls lightly before rebuilding. I used hondabond under the rubber pucks. Blue loctite on the cam tower bolts. Everything was torqued and re-torqued according to manual specs. I used new valve seals, new head gasket, replaced the oil pump screen, new cam cover gasket.
Oh, and also whoever recommended taping those little oil orifices in the head, THANK YOU! I had a close call with them falling out when I took it to the shop. One of them was very dirty and probably totally blocked. I cleaned them out completely, and blew compressed air through all the oil passages in the head and the block.
Got the engine back in and spent about 20 minutes priming the oil pump before I saw oil flowing into the filter house, main galley, and finally up to the top end. No sense in frying a rebuilt engine!
So far everything was working great - I had the whole bike back together, I was getting oil everywhere it needed to be, time to fire it up.
I didn't have new plugs on me, just the old fouled plugs that wouldn't fire before - the reason I started this whole project to begin with. I cleaned them as best I could with alcohol and scotchbrite.
Moment of truth - I hit the starter and it fires up immediately. It sounded a bit sluggish, similar to how it did before when not all the cylinders were firing. I thought maybe I hadn't cleaned the plugs well enough, or its just from sitting for 6 months and being rebuilt. I give it a bit of gas... starting to smooth out. A bit more gas... BANG!!!!!! It sounded like a gun was fired in my ear. I hit the kill switch and saw a bit of blackish smoke coming out of hte right pipe. $%@$ I killed my bike in 20 seconds.
Or did I... That makes no sense. Everything was put back correctly I'm sure. I had two other guys look it over while building it. It hadn't been running long enough to overheat if there was an oil issue. Then I noticed something sticking out of the snowbank a few meters from the shop garage door that was open. I blew the baffle clean out of my right pipe! The weld had broken last year already, and the baffle was stuck in from friction ever since. I guess it had enough.
I tried turning the engine over with the kick starter - there was no unusual resistance, weird noises or things out of the ordinary. If I blew up my motor, I figured I'd notice something. So I tried firing it up again. It started up right away again, only this time the right side sounds like a demon out of hell roaring for all it's worth, and the left side is normal and quite haha. Well hey... At least it runs. I guess it's time to sort out an exhuast option now...