Try our new info resource - "Aladdin's Cave" (Main menu)Just added a separate link to Ash's Dropbox thread (shortcut)
Surprised Julie didn't say yes or no for Graham or maybe that would be a bit cheeky, I hate it when my missus volunteers me for jobs.
What would be considered normal for a 350/400 sohc?I've done 500 miles of running in new pistons and rings, the bores were properly machined and honed and I know that my valve guides are on the upper end of the serviceable limit. Oil level is just above the min mark on dipstick after 500 miles. Is this acceptable or should I really get the head reconditioned?I'll be honest I can't detect any smoke from the exhausts in my mirrors while riding or at idle but my friend said the other day there's a faint haze when I'm giving it the beans.Having seen your missives and having worked on Hondas whilst in the trade I never came across any Honda car or bike that had a 500 mile per pint consumption. There is something seriously wrong and with the data you provided I’d have walked away from that one as it appears to have been done on the cheap. No way would I have taken it down to piston rings and honing without doing work on the whole head with complete strip down, that’s a recipe for problems that you seem to have incurred. If one valve stem has loosened then the whole shebang needs doing. Another fault could be the piston rings being put in the wrong piston step or even upside down in the right one and yes I came across that but not on a Honda.500 mile run in and giving it ‘The Beans ‘ is not conducive to running an engine in even a Honda. I wish you all the best with it but I suspect you have inherited a moving money pit.CheersSimonSent from my SM-G780G using Tapatalk
As a thought, what oil have you used?If you use modern 0-30 oils then that will go up past th e pistons and down the valve stems.You should use a 10-40 mineral oil or equivalent, Hondas clearances we’re close but not to todays micron standards.
"No idea what oil was in it but it came out very very black and thin so I suspect it was breaking down which wouldn't help."Usually associated with running too rich, either from carbs being altered to excess or more normally far too much running with engine cold/choked to allow excess fuelling past the piston rings into the oil. The giveaway is oil smell (compare old to new) as it will generally stink of unburnt fuel.The gearbox doesn't colour or dilute the oil in use but often it's pointed to as culprit in these scenario. Honda service interval is an acknowledgement of overall fuelling strategy which ultimately comes from the necessity to run slide carbs too rich ideally for a decent longer oil term, essentially it will dilute the oil and reduce viscosity. Sensible to start with new oil and monitor condition, see what it looks like at 500 and 1000 miles etc.With short runs and often on choke though you'd expect the oil to be knackered by about 500 and well short of Honda service specification.
Not sure what work your engine had done prior to you getting the bike but if Graphogen had been used during the build, the oil will come out black at the 1st oil change.
Quote from: Nurse Julie on September 19, 2022, 09:00:41 AMNot sure what work your engine had done prior to you getting the bike but if Graphogen had been used during the build, the oil will come out black at the 1st oil change.Hmmmm indeed a possibility. I hate the stuff but that's another topic entirely. I had strip and clean a freshly rebuilt engine with no oil pressure once because the oilways in the crank were blocked with graphogen.Ever since at work we only use the oil the engine will be run on as assembly lube. Then build up oil pressure before cranking. Sent from my SM-G780G using Tapatalk