Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > ? How can you disconnect the governor arm from the carborator without messing up the governor or wrecking the linkage to the carb?
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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friiy
Location: Las Vegas, The Desert
Joined: Apr 12, 2008
Points: 600
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Re: ? How can you disconnect the governor arm from the carborator without messing up the governor or wrecking the linkage to the carb?
Reply #58 Nov 11, 2008 5:29 pm |
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Borat, The bikes look great, it is nice to see someone going though them like they deserve, instead of watching them decay on the side of someones house... On your Honda tractor, Does the pressurized oil make it to the head via some sort of porting? Or does it strickly use the belts for lube and scavange? The Honda's I've had apartper pressurized only to the cam, crank and rod. The head was still oiled from slinged / splashed from the cam gear. up the pushrod well. Friiy
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borat
Joined: Nov 10, 2007
Points: 2692
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Re: ? How can you disconnect the governor arm from the carborator without messing up the governor or wrecking the linkage to the carb?
Reply #61 Nov 11, 2008 9:12 pm |
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These are some nice bikes. When you find them are they is mint shape like this? Do their owners share an appreciation for their technological accomplishment or do you see something that they don't? I saw a motor like the brown one you have shown posted on craigslist recently. The guy selling it said it would be a good go-cart power plant. But I wasn't buying.
Q: "When you find them are they is mint shape like this?"
A: No. The red RD400 is the one that I fully restored. It was shamefully abused and in terrible condition. Spent several grand and hundreds of hours of work to make it look like that. The purple RD350 is a very well kept example but hardly mint. It's all in pieces right now as I begin it's restoration. I'll post some pics as I go along... Q: "Do their owners share an appreciation for their technological accomplishment or do you see something that they don't?" A: Hard to say for sure. Can't really speak for the previous owners. Some would like to restore the bikes but don't have the money or wherewithal to do it. Others don't have a clue of what they have. Just an old motorcycle getting in the way in the shed. There are a many however who fully appreciate these machines for the true icons they are. Guys who have either owned one in the past or just plain motorcycle enthusiasts with a knowledge of their history covet these machines. I've seen examples of restoration and modification of some of these old rockets that is truly impressive and worthy of praise. Some guys just keep riding them with little or no attention to restoration. Basic maintenance and that's it. Re the go cart power plant. If it's from either an RD350 or RD400, it would make an excellent go cart engine. In stock form they make around 40 h.p. at the rear wheel. With a little massaging and a few bucks, somewhere around 60 h.p. can be realized. In the hands of a skilled racer, it would be a great engine. If one is not familiar with the "light switch" power delivery of a pipey two stroke, it would be a handful to say the least.
This message was modified Nov 11, 2008 by borat
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Underdog
Joined: Oct 18, 2008
Points: 332
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Question on Testing for compression and sample video
Reply #66 Dec 22, 2008 3:54 pm |
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This Yamaha is blowing snow. It still needs some fine tuning and adjustments. The skids/shoes and scaper bar are not correctly adjusted. The governor will sometimes over-rev the engine. I'd like to test the compression to see if that's an issue. But overall I can see why these swowblowers have developed somewhat of a cult following. Very easy to turn the tracks on snow (one hand). 4th speed in forward is a nice walking pace and the 2nd reverse gear partially makes up for the fact that you cannot roll this blower backwards in neutral. I'm running it in a low-mid throttle setting (in 2nd gear) in the video in a heavy windblown snow/sleet mix that sat for 2 days. You can tell by the spotlight that I need to increase the throttle. But its at high throttle that I get the over reving governor. If I go into a big snowbank it revs up just fine but then when i clear the snowbank the rpms don't automatically drop back down. Is it hard to test for compression? http://www.vimeo.com/2604216
This message was modified Dec 22, 2008 by Underdog
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