On saturday I got out in the garage and worked on both my bikes. I've probably said in the past how my top end had been progressively leaking more and more oil out of a few places. It's gotten so bad the past couple years that I have a special pair of jeans I use just for riding the 350 that have oil stains on both the shins. Even though I don't have hardly any time or money to fix this problem I decided to take the first step towards fixing it and disassemble my top end. The riding season's pretty much over anyways so I figure I've got nothing to lose.
Here we go! Got the carbs off. I kinda hate how good I am at taking them off. I've done it too many times.
You can see how bad the leaks were
Next off was the coils and valve cover. I hadn't been into this area since 2007 and I was glad to see that all the surfaces still look as good now as they did then. The new tensioner and guide that I installed had what seems to be an appropriate amount of wear for the miles.
Took me a while to figure out how to get the cam out. You undo the cam sprocket and slide it off to the side a bit. This gives you enough slack in the cam chain to take it off the sprocket and you can then slide the cam out. I tied a string to the cam chain to keep from losing it down into the engine.
Sitting perched near the bracket to hold down the tensioner blade was this piece of metal. I assume it came from the tensioning horseshoe getting rubbed on because it was steel. Either way I'm glad it didn't cause any massive damage
Time to remove the head (or as I called it, the point of no return) I would have gotten it off on my first try if I had noticed the one 10mm bolt that sits on the outside right behind the cam chain tunnel.
Anyone want a gently used head gasket?
The combustion chambers all looked good. Just your standard carbon buildup.
Now for the not-so-great findings. I don't recall ever seeing this on other motor teardowns but these marks were on 2 or 3 of the pistons. It looks like the intake valve was hitting the piston but there wasn't any evidence of this on the valves
I also discovered that I am missing the rubber holder for the bottom of the tensioning blade. It wasn't on the blade when I pulled it out and It isn't in the end of the horseshoe. It must have fallen off when I installed the blade in 2007 because I found one in the sump when I replaced the sump gasket a couple years ago. I don't remember what I did with it then but I think I threw it out
The final not-so-great discovery was the crud build up on the studs that sit in the oil supply routes to the head. Luckily nothing had gotten high enough to get stuck in one of the oil jets for the cam lobes but I don't want to have to tear the rest of the motor down to clean this crud out of all the oil passages. It looks worse than the picture shows
Final order of business was to remove the cylinders. I had read that some of these bikes have special pry spots for getting the cylinders lose. I couldn't find any so, not wanting to damage any fins, I found the area near the "347" was beefier than the rest of the fins so I tried prying like this:
That didn't get me anywhere so I used my screwdriver and hammered from the bottom on this same area and the cylinders came free. The bores all looked shiney with no scratches, just a ridge on the top. All the pistons looked fine as well. You can also see the crud in that oil passage on the left.
Kinda sad looking, I thought:
Now for the thing I am debating in my head. There was a debate on this site some time ago about if it is truly necessary to replace the piston rings if you pull the motor apart. Some said yes, other said no. I'm leaning towards not doing this because, as some said in the thread, my rings were already perfectly bedded in (as shown by the shiny cylinder walls and great compression readings), and the piston rings move around during normal operation so their orientation isn't a big issue. I do have an oem set of standard bore pistons with rings that I was planning on selling someday but would still need to pay to get the cylinders honed and then end up with slightly larger bores and I may not get quite as good of compression numbers as I had before. A re-ring obviously wouldn't cost me all that much since I have the parts but I'm trying to cut costs whereever possible. So what are your opinions?
Finally, I forgot that I wanted to get a picture of both bikes together before I started tearing the 350 down but this will have to do.