Terry, the thing you need is a flying machine, not a time machine
The selection of beers is so much better these days. Although if you have fond memories of Heineken and cheap cheeseburgers, who am I to argue with that
Meanwhile holidays and other priorities took over, but I did spend a bit of time on the old Fours again.
Earlier, I had put some effort into getting the brake line off in one piece, only to have to put it back in to get the piston out
Usually compressed air does the trick, but this time my trusty bicycle pump gave up before the piston showed any sign of moment. Figures...
But after re-connecting and re-bleeding, it popped right out into the old frying pan.
Note that this is AFTER the first shop towel wipedown. I thought gray matter belonged in your head, but it looks like a PO collected it in his bikes' brakes. I guess he didn't need it anymore.
Anyway, the piston cleaned up to a shine, so it should be all good with just a new seal.
On to engine business. I took the redstone for its first ride in my posession. Well, a very short ride. It started up OK cold, though I did have to hold the throttle open a little bit (say to 1500rpm or so).
But about a mile down the road it refused to idle, where the definition of idle is to be taken quite broadly: anything under half throttle or 5000 rpm and it would just die, with no hope of ever starting again. So I took it up the sidewalk and after a few minutes of trying to look like I knew what I was doing, it started up again, with some effort. So I rode straight home, and on the last intersection... yup, I had to slow down for other traffic and poof, dead again. Had to walk it the rest of the way home. Have to say, btw, I like it. Handles differently than a modern bike, but certainly no worse.
Btw does anyone recognise that 4-1 exhaust? Whatever it is, it is WAY WAY WAY too loud for me. Also, I like to change oil without having to drop the pipes first.
So then Deltarider came over and some tire-kicking was done. We also drained the tombstone (that had been sitting for 20 something years) carb bowls and a dark oily substance came out. I'm unsure whether that's just 20 year old fuel or whether someone put in some conservation fluid. Either way, I'm afraid I'll have to take the carbs apart before even
trying to start it up. I did 'fix' its electrical issues: it helps if you plug the ignition switch in fully. So at least it's had some oil pressure now from cranking it over.
For the redstone "idle" issues, we checked #4 carb float level, and I borrowed his drain screw adapter to do the others later. Then we took a look under the points covers and saw whoever adjusted the points, may have confused plug gap with points gap
Thus dwell angle was little more than
half of what it should've been. Strangely it wanted to rev quite happily - just didn't want to "idle" warm (well, didn't want ANYTHING below 5k rpm or half throttle)
Anyway, after Deltarider left, I adjusted both bikes' points and static timing. To get 'em in the ballpark, you know.
Contrary to expectation the "sitting for 20 years" Tombstone was totally fine, needed very little adjustment. The "rode it yesterday" Redstone however, was an entirely different story. Even with the points gap set correctly, ignition was still way, way, WAY off. Closer to the 2-3 marks than the 1-4 marks. So just before I took out a spark plug to check the (markings on the) advance plate for misalignment, Deltarider suggested I take a look at the points cam. With that tiny little centerpoint dot on it... that is apparently supposed to point towards the TEC logo. Sure enough, the points cam was installed 180 degrees off. OK - so I reversed it, put it all back together aaand... still way off. Ok. Points gap again. Way wide again. With that re-adjusted though, everything came together nicely as on the Tombstone. Having two of these bikes really helps!
But how did it even run with the points cam 180 degress off? Easy - the coil wires were also reversed
So ... good progress was made tidying it up a bit. Whether that's enough to make it actually rideable for more than a mile remains to be seen. By the time I had it buttoned back up, it was too late to start it up with this OBNOXIOUS pipe.