Hello all,
This is my first “problem post” so bear with me please:
I have a ’78 CB750K that I’ve been working on for over 2 yrs now. My best guess is that it has not been started in over four years. About 2 months ago, I took a pressure washer to my engine and frame to clean them up. I covered all the intake/exhaust ports and stayed away from assorted other opening in the engine to be sure I would not get water in the engine, but about a week after pressure washing, I found I could no longer crank the engine. Up until then, I had been able to crank/rotate the engine using the kick starter with my hands, but it is no impossible to crank.
So far as a solution, poured diesel fuel into all cylinders and it slowly drained out of all but one cylinder, the cylinder on the far left as you sit on the bike (sorry, don’t recall the number). After this, I put ATF in that cylinder and continued to let it soak, periodically trying to crank the engine via the kick starter, but to no avail.
Following this, I put the engine back in the frame and hooked up the chain and attempted to “rock” the bike free, but this didn’t work either.
My next course of action is to disassemble the top end and try to free the cylinder by hand. The service manual directs that you rotate the engine to line up certain valve train components in order to remove them. Here are my concerns:
1. If I cannot rotate/crank the engine, can I properly disassemble the top end?
2. Does the head/valve cover have to be installed and fully tightened in order for the engine to crank? I ask this because it is not “fully installed and tightened” it is only resting on the engine.
3. What recommendation do you all have as far as freeing the piston once I get the top end off? I saw one fellow recommend taking an impact driver to it, and that seems needlessly violent. I’d like to keep everything fairly intact/in good condition so I can get this thing back together and running.
Sorry, for the long post, but I want to include as many details as possible, please respond with any guidance/encouragement/ominous first-hand experience.
Ron