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If there is a way to tell I don't know. But those are 61X cases. Otherwise, they would be marked "6M6" I believe. The cylinders will be marked with 61X.Thanks Mike. Can you also tell the year of manufacture?
If you are asking if the spark plugs can contact the piston , there is no way for that to happen with the large bathtub style dome Yamaha uses , even if it had BR8ES plugs in it , still won't happen , now if pieces of the rod bearing or crank bearings get loose they can come up through the transfer ports and bounce around before exiting the exhaust.I cannot post up photos from my inspection camera because it is a Micro SD card and I can't find my adapter to full size SD card.
However, I can describe an unusual thing I saw in the front cylinder.
The top of the front piston had some fresh shiny "dings" in the very center where the spark plug is located above.
I am wondering if there is some "piston slap" due to excessive slack in either the piston wrist pin or in the piston rod bearing where it attaches to the crank shaft?
Is there any way to test for this with the engine in the ski?
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Jeff Seabold at Competitive crankshafts in Idaho. https://www.facebook.com/competitivecrankshafts/I won't pull the cylinder(s) until I put the Yamaha 650 in my wife's ski.
But out of curiosity, where can you buy a new Yamaha 701 oem crankshaft assembly for a decent price?
Better than Partzilla.com:
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Oddly the 64x crank is normally cheaper (and the same) But I would go with an SBT crank from JM. I am running them on high compression/timing engines and haven't had any issues with them.I won't pull the cylinder(s) until I put the Yamaha 650 in my wife's ski.
But out of curiosity, where can you buy a new Yamaha 701 oem crankshaft assembly for a decent price?
Better than Partzilla.com:
View attachment 451010