**PROGRESS MADE.**
I checked the airbox bottom, and the air filter, expecting to find oil in the bottom of the airbox and on the air filter.
Nothing.
So because this bike is a California model, it has all sorts of cannisters to collect engine stuff such as the crankcase breather. I followed the large rubber tube from the top rear of the engine, which I assume is the crankcase vent, up to a sizable plastic 3-nozzle catch-bucket to the right under the gas tank (rear of the tank on the right).
The crankcase breather tube runs to this plastic catch-bucket and there are 2 output hoses from it -- one leads to the valve/cam cover on the right (rear) side of the cover, and one tube leads to yet another cannister that is mounted under the freaking swingarm, at the very front of the arm.
Each of these extra cannisters and hoses should be labeled with a politician's name in Sacramento who imposed this crap on the bike makers. Only California models required all this schitt.
So back to the 3-nozzled plastic bucket being fed by the crankcase breather hose. I pulled all three hoses off the plastic bucket and removed the bucket - I wanted to turn it upside down to 'let all the oil out' -- I figured the crankcase breather must have filled it up with oil and the oil was being piped over to the cams/valve train, voila that's where the smoke was coming from, right?
I turned the plastic catch-bucket upside down, nothing came out.
Put the catch bucket back on the frame and re-connected the 3 hoses to it. Started the bike. NO SMOKE.
Took the bike out for an extended ride, about 1/2 an hour, a mixture of long stretches of open road then into the city with lots of stop and go's. NO SMOKING.
Finally about 3 blocks from home the smoke came out. It's *not* blue smoke, not oil. As I mentioned before, the plugs are golden brown like normal.
Then I remembered -- when I flushed the gas tank, I used lacquer thinner to cut the old gas to more easily remove it from the tank.
The smoke disappeared before I finished those 2 blocks to home.
So I think I'm just burning off the lacquer thinner remnants, I know there was some left in there, I couldn't get it all out.
The smoke was light brown. Smelled funny too. Didn't smell like oil. Didn't smell quite like gas.
I'm also assuming that all the Sacramento Tree-Hugger cannisters on this bike have some gunk left inside, just like the gas tank had stuff that had progressed way beyond varnish. The bike sat a long time.
That's why I rode it a lengthy bit today. Clean out its guts. So the source of the smoking was either:
- remants of lacquer thinner still left in the gas tank after flushing the tank with the thinner
- and/or old gunk/vapors that are still inside the Tree-hugger pollution cannisters after the bike sat for 25 years.
It was last registered and run on the road in 1990.