ATS_Aaron
X-
- Location
- Shady Shores, TX
I've got to talk about someone's bad luck other than mine....
Last Summer Scott installed some higher compression domes in his ~830cc stroker engine. He had been running about 155 psi and the ski was running great. The new domes put him at 200-205 psi compression.
He poured in some MS109 race fuel (and did not rejet) and we went out. At first the ski kept blowing the spark plug boots off. Once we figured out a way to hold then on with zip ties it blew up. I mean almost instantly.
The rear carburetor wasn't getting fuel. I have found in my many sad experiences that this means you have lost compression in the cylinder and no longer sending a pulse to the fuel pump.
So we pulled the head and sure enough the piston looked like it had bird footprints all over it. It had snagged a ring. It had no signs of detonation and the piston was not melted from being too lean. Scott found a piece of RTV sealant stuck to the bottom of his fuel pickup for that carburetor (left over from his internal fill conversion.)
So we chalked the failure up to a couple of things:
1. Too lean on the MS109 - it is oxygenated and you need more fuel.
2. Too lean on rear cylinder because of clogged/semi-clogged fuel pickup.
3. The heat from being too lean caused the piston and rings to get hotter than normal. This caused the ring to expand and to catch on the exhaust port. That broke the ring into pieces and sent it through the transfer ports where it ended up on top of the piston and gave us the bird footprints.
Continued....
Last Summer Scott installed some higher compression domes in his ~830cc stroker engine. He had been running about 155 psi and the ski was running great. The new domes put him at 200-205 psi compression.
He poured in some MS109 race fuel (and did not rejet) and we went out. At first the ski kept blowing the spark plug boots off. Once we figured out a way to hold then on with zip ties it blew up. I mean almost instantly.
The rear carburetor wasn't getting fuel. I have found in my many sad experiences that this means you have lost compression in the cylinder and no longer sending a pulse to the fuel pump.
So we pulled the head and sure enough the piston looked like it had bird footprints all over it. It had snagged a ring. It had no signs of detonation and the piston was not melted from being too lean. Scott found a piece of RTV sealant stuck to the bottom of his fuel pickup for that carburetor (left over from his internal fill conversion.)
So we chalked the failure up to a couple of things:
1. Too lean on the MS109 - it is oxygenated and you need more fuel.
2. Too lean on rear cylinder because of clogged/semi-clogged fuel pickup.
3. The heat from being too lean caused the piston and rings to get hotter than normal. This caused the ring to expand and to catch on the exhaust port. That broke the ring into pieces and sent it through the transfer ports where it ended up on top of the piston and gave us the bird footprints.
Continued....