Thanks bro. I just rebuilt engine to a 120p and it lasted 10mins. Had lean condition grated one of rear seal blew out but I had to up jets and n/s etc, got pop off to like 28lbs. In order to change jets I gotta take motor out of hull..got a B1 so trying to cover my bases. I had a 110 pilot and 135 main, was gonna up them to 120 and 145 but was my lean condition due to the ONE seal being blown out? Should i up jets or leave them what they were. This is where I worry. Thanks for your info.
There’s a lot of things that can lead to a failure that have nothing to do with jetting.
If you have pictures of the damage to your rear cyl I’d post them so we can look at them and get an idea on what happened.
Few things that come to mind.
Why did a real seal blow out on a fresh rebuild? Did you tear the entire motor down or did you just do a top end? There could have been debris in the case on that cyl if you didn’t tear the entire motor down.
What were you doing when you blew the rear cyl? If you were WOT on a motor with less than 10 minutes on it that could’ve been a big part of your issue.
Improper installation of parts or improper clearances could’ve been an issue.
Yes a single blown seal can introduce unmetered air into your engine, they put two there for a reason lol.
You need to build this motor properly from the bottom up in a clean environment and do a proper leak down test first and foremost. Then you need to break it in properly and watch your temps and read your plugs until you’re confident in your tuning. It’s pretty hard to melt a rear cyl with semi close jetting if you aren’t going nuts wide open across the lake.
Do some research, it’s impossible for me or anyone to give you a dead nuts jetting spec
and you’ll have to account for your conditions too when basing your jetting off someone else’s similar build.