that's how I assembled the engine myself, I didn't realize that the compression would increase so much, piston manufacturers always give the compression ratio. Pistons in my k7 and F2 are also slightly convex, I was not aware of the difference in the cylinder head
painful lesson, but always a lesson ![Wink ;)](http://forums.sohc4.net/Smileys/default/wink.gif)
Can you post some pictures of the side of the melted pistons, cylinder head’s combustion chamber, spark plug, and the cylinder bore ? Is this the same motor that you had some bearing questions on ?
I have only this photos, 2 and 3 are the worst condition. I send cyoinders to veryfication
Thanks.
The spark plugs, cylinder head combustion chambers, and valves will tell the “rest of the story”… (Paul Harvey)
GH makes some good points. 1&4 tolerated their running conditions better. It does look like #2 piston skirt was showing signs of something where the #2 is wrote on the skirt. 2&3 ignition timing could still be different than 1&4 if using OEM point plate style triggering. If number 2 piston skirt is actually showing signs of scuffing it may have soon followed #3. I know by design of the air cooled inline four, 2&3 could run a little hotter than 1&4. But I would think #3 excessive heat would have transferred to the adjacent #4. Prior to transferring through the cam chain tunnel to #2.
So similar to GH, I would be looking for Carburetor issues with #3, then #2. I would check for #3 actual slide opening at 1/4 throttle as compared to 1&4. Verify Synchronization. If #3 slide is considerably farther open than the rest it could indicate #3 was doing most of the work. Causing a different work load and environment for number 3.. Adding a lean mixture, an advanced ignition timing, and an increased work load may have contributed to #3 failure.
Without pictures of the spark plugs and cylinder head, is similar to trying to determine 60 foot drag race time issues without your tires your running…🤔