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By Thack
#4070
My B5 has 700 miles on it now, and I must say the engine does seem mechanically noisy. Most of the noise sounds like loose tappets (i.e. clicky rather than clanky or knocky), but I thought hydraulic tappets were supposed to be quiet.



How much noise do these engines produce? Are the hydraulic tappets silent, like they are on my car? Is there something I should be checking?
By Michael
#39049
Quite noisy :) The tappets are not silent, but are hydraulic so don't need adjusting. Also, 700 miles is not run in yet, despite what the factory says :) don't worry so much about the noise... it is a change in noise that should concern you!
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By Scalyback
#39050
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Well, at about 800 miles, mine sounded like this... But ignore the strange high pitch 'air' type noise, the front of the exhaust had come loose! Discovered that after making the vid!



















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By Scalyback
#39052



As for noise, anything between a can of nuts being rolled down the stairs, to a washing machine full of spoons!






By Mark M
#39057
Near the end of the video I thought Scaly was going to do a Steve McQueen and jump the wire! Maybe next time?!
REgards, Mark
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By Presto
#39058
Allowing for a bit of cross-fertilization between postings, maybe you should use SAE50 oil – being the same viscosity as tomato juice (fact!) that may quieten things down a bit! ;-)
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By Leon Novello
#39059
Hydraulic tappets are designed to run quietly, this is why anything up to 8-cylinder, 4-valves per cylinder car engines can be very mechanically quiet. When they do start making a noise it`s usually lack of oil causing wear and they are replaced.
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By Scalyback
#39060
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Somewhere during or after running in, the engine seems to settle down, and people don't always remember to mention this.



I looked after Thunderbolt well and now at about 2400 miles, he sounds like this...





Cold start










When warm.
















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By Presto
#39061
It may not be specifically the tappets, the general valve gear on all Bullets - including EFIs - is noisy compared with many other makes. The use of rubber dampers points to the fact that the engine is prone to be noisy - these are not an item that is common on four strokes, but are often used for two-strokes because the fins tend to ring on a two stroke (being thinner and of greater area) in a way that four stroke barrels generally do not.

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