- Tue Dec 09, 2014 9:24 am
#4487
So, on the advice of this forum I lobbed an NGK BPR6ES (I think! The new plug is whatever has been advised!) into my EFI because the Bosch plug I had been using soots up really quickly and the bike has been misfiring badly for a wee while now. this, I think, is mainly due to sooting of plug and there being next to no gap becuase of build up.
Started first kick... idled nicely in the garage, ran it until hot and never missed a beat. It was a chilly night last night so I didn't pull the plug again to check as I was outside for ages doing other things too, but I am pleased with the initial improvements.
However, maybe a learned forum-ite can give me some more info on a few questions I have. A plug soots up because of incomplete combustion right - so too much fuel, not enough air or not enough spark/heat. Given that this is an EFI bike, you would expect the fuel-air ratio to be correct unless there was an air leak (which there doesn't seem to be, I checked) so the sooty plug was most likely caused by the plug itself not generating enough heat or perhaps a poor spark (e.g. coil, dud plug)? Would that be right?
Second question... what if the soot was instead, oil - this would mean oil in the combustion chamber right? The ways for oil to get in there include: past the piston (i.e. rings/bore worn), through the valve/valve guides (i.e. guides/stems worn or stem seals kaput) or through the air filter/crankcase breather (check air filter for oilyness)... So what would cause too much oil to go out through the breather into the air filter then into the combustion chamber?
One final point to add... my bike is leaking oil very slightly from the exhaust rocker and an o-ring at the head gasket joint. Moreover, there is a slight carbon looking build-up at the head gasket joint itself, especially round the pushrod guides. Anything to be overly concerned about? I only mention because the main theme in this message is 'soot and oil where they shouldn't be.'
Started first kick... idled nicely in the garage, ran it until hot and never missed a beat. It was a chilly night last night so I didn't pull the plug again to check as I was outside for ages doing other things too, but I am pleased with the initial improvements.
However, maybe a learned forum-ite can give me some more info on a few questions I have. A plug soots up because of incomplete combustion right - so too much fuel, not enough air or not enough spark/heat. Given that this is an EFI bike, you would expect the fuel-air ratio to be correct unless there was an air leak (which there doesn't seem to be, I checked) so the sooty plug was most likely caused by the plug itself not generating enough heat or perhaps a poor spark (e.g. coil, dud plug)? Would that be right?
Second question... what if the soot was instead, oil - this would mean oil in the combustion chamber right? The ways for oil to get in there include: past the piston (i.e. rings/bore worn), through the valve/valve guides (i.e. guides/stems worn or stem seals kaput) or through the air filter/crankcase breather (check air filter for oilyness)... So what would cause too much oil to go out through the breather into the air filter then into the combustion chamber?
One final point to add... my bike is leaking oil very slightly from the exhaust rocker and an o-ring at the head gasket joint. Moreover, there is a slight carbon looking build-up at the head gasket joint itself, especially round the pushrod guides. Anything to be overly concerned about? I only mention because the main theme in this message is 'soot and oil where they shouldn't be.'