Okay, so it was Friday here in the wonderful land of Oz when I started typing this, but I fell into a drunken coma and then dragged myself off to bed.
Working from home is the greatest, and most flexible way of mixing boring paid work with motorcycle pleasure. I woke up early yesterday, logged on at around 7.15, then by around 9.30 decided it was time to go pick up my Triumph Rocket III from the bike shop after dropping it off on Wednesday for new tyres and a minor service, including flushing and changing out the 14 year old brake fluid.
I hadn't noticed any braking degradation, but when I had the bike stored in a 20 foot shipping container I noticed one summer that there was a line of brake fluid bubbling past the seal in the MC, I guess it must have gotten pretty hot in the shipping container, and the brake fluid expanded in the MC's reservoir? Regardless, it was nice to ride it home with shiny new tyres, fresh oil, a new filter, new coolant and fresh brake fluid. Of course, all this came at a cost and I'm $1300 poorer for it, but that only equates to $100 a year for every year I've owned it, so not too horrible.
Rocket III Friday 16 Apr 2021 5 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
Anyhoo, I went back to the ol' virtual saltmine for a few hours, then once I'd done enough for the day, my thoughts turned to the truly horrible K2 engine. I'd had the ATF/Acetone "Hot Sauce" soaking the two heavily rusted bores for a couple of days and still can't decide if it really did anything apart from waste ATF and Acetone, but it might have helped, maybe.
I'd decided that I was gonna remove every bolt and nut holding the engine top and bottom cases together, my thinking was that if the crank was seized in rusted/corroded main bearings, when I started pounding on the pistons, not having the crank locked in place would allow it to turn, thus (hopefully) not causing any additional damage to the cases. First of all was removing the 4 countersunk JIS screws that hold the external bearing plate on. No amount of heat, penetrant or smacking it with my JIS impact screwdriver was gonna shift any of those screws, so I had to drill the heads off.
Terry’s Horrible K2 Engine Autopsy 16 Apr 2021 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
Once the cover was off, the nubs were easy to remove, and no threads were damaged. Yay!
Terry’s Horrible K2 Engine Autopsy 16 Apr 2021 1 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
I then went around the engine with my little rattle gun removing all the 6mm screws. I did manage to undo most of the 8mm crank bolts, but a couple were too hard for the little gun, so I had to bring out "Big Bertha", that made short work of those bolts, and the 8mm bolts at the rear of the engine cases.
Terry’s Horrible K2 Engine Autopsy 16 Apr 2021 3 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
So all done, I gave the engine cases a few smacks close to the joint surfaces, but no bueno. No biggie, I could come back to that later, my next task was to smack those pistons into submission, so I grabbed my big hex brass drift and my big ball pein hammer, and started laying into it, unmercifully. After a few big whacks, I could see a gap opening under the cylinder block.
Terry’s Horrible K2 Engine Autopsy 16 Apr 2021 6 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
More whacking gave me a bigger gap.
Terry’s Horrible K2 Engine Autopsy 16 Apr 2021 7 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
As the two centre pistons (in the badly rusted bores) were freed, I removed the cam chain tensioner assembly and slid some blocks of aluminium under the cylinder block to allow me to further smack the two outside pistons down without the two inside ones getting jammed under their sleeves, and to support the block as the pistons went further down and the block came up, I added more aluminium blocks, and this worked well.
Terry’s Horrible K2 Engine Autopsy 16 Apr 2021 9 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
While I'd initially thought that the outside pistons would just about fall out, that wasn't the case, and I had to keep right on smacking away until they were free. But finally, inch by inch, the cylinder block was completely free. Success!
Terry’s Horrible K2 Engine Autopsy 16 Apr 2021 9a by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
So after another swig on my bottle of Ginger Joe, I separated the cases, which by now were very loose, and I flipped the top case over, to take a look inside. I was pleasantly surprised, no rust or corrosion!
And that was enough for one day. as horrible as this bike was in general, I can see the light at the end of the tunnel, after some not inconsiderable tunnel works over the next week or two. Good thing is I don't need to worry too much about internal carnage now, some new chains, bearings, camchain adjuster, gaskets, pistons, a rebore, case clean-up and paint, some new bolts and other stuff I've probably forgotten, and it'll be like a new one again. I think I'll celebrate today with a ride.
Terry’s Horrible K2 Engine Autopsy 16 Apr 2021 9f by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr