And how to set the timing with the celophane cigarette pack cover?gramey7 wrote:Jensen,
I don't think anyone can make fun of your screwdriver stethoscope. My father taught me that about 40 years ago and it does work. He also taught me to use book matches ( the "close cover before striking" kind) as a point gap gage.
George
Reading valve color
66 dream, 78 cb750k, 02fz1, 09 wing
-
- h305 Moderator
- Posts: 2601
- Joined: Fri Oct 31, 2003 1:38 pm
- Location: Mallorca, Spain & Warsash, UK
Christ, I'd forgotten that one! Just an edge between the (refaced) contacts, blow gently whilst tweaking the backplate.brewsky wrote:And how to set the timing with the celophane cigarette pack cover?gramey7 wrote:Jensen,
I don't think anyone can make fun of your screwdriver stethoscope. My father taught me that about 40 years ago and it does work. He also taught me to use book matches ( the "close cover before striking" kind) as a point gap gage.
George
I made my first testlamp from a discarded, all-plastic instrument lampholder -- the type that uses the 4-Watt wedge-based lamps -- whilst playing with my first CB77. My first bike, a Villiers-engined James Captain, had a magneto so a testlamp was useless.
-
- honda305.com Member
- Posts: 82
- Joined: Wed Mar 11, 2009 11:32 am
- Location: Los Angeles, California
Yes I did. And on both starter motors I have, I was unable to turn that little sprocket by hand -- so I assumed that was the normal condition of them. But, judging by e3steve's experience, it looks as though they should turn.LOUD MOUSE wrote:Did I miss if ya tried to turn the sprocket on the """"""starter motor""""""""?
Use a punch near the edge of the screw a couple of spots. ...lm
Now, did the unstaked screw cause the sprocket to wobble, which in turn damaged the starter motor, OR did a bad starter motor induce the screw to come loose?
And, either way, is this the root cause of the motor "seizure" I experienced? And, Jensen, if the starter motor was causing the problem, I can see how I could have interpreted the sound of it's resistance to turn as emanating from the area of the oil spinner!
Thanks everyone, I feel like we're getting somewhere.
nander
-
- h305 Moderator
- Posts: 2601
- Joined: Fri Oct 31, 2003 1:38 pm
- Location: Mallorca, Spain & Warsash, UK
Probably.nander wrote:Yes I did. And on both starter motors I have, I was unable to turn that little sprocket by hand -- so I assumed that was the normal condition of them. But, judging by e3steve's experience, it looks as though they should turn.LOUD MOUSE wrote:Did I miss if ya tried to turn the sprocket on the """"""starter motor""""""""?
Use a punch near the edge of the screw a couple of spots. ...lm
Now, did the unstaked screw cause the sprocket to wobble, which in turn damaged the starter motor, OR did a bad starter motor induce the screw to come loose?
And, either way, is this the root cause of the motor "seizure" I experienced? And, Jensen, if the starter motor was causing the problem, I can see how I could have interpreted the sound of it's resistance to turn as emanating from the area of the oil spinner!
Thanks everyone, I feel like we're getting somewhere.
nander
Nope.
The starter motor is a piece-o'-piss to disassemble, but take off the sun & planets gearbox (3 screws, sprocket end) first and see if the motor spins with your fingers via the exposed pinion.
Last edited by e3steve on Wed Oct 20, 2010 12:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Not heard of that procedure!e3steve wrote:Christ, I'd forgotten that one! Just an edge between the (refaced) contacts, blow gently whilst tweaking the backplate.brewsky wrote:And how to set the timing with the celophane cigarette pack cover?gramey7 wrote:Jensen,
I don't think anyone can make fun of your screwdriver stethoscope. My father taught me that about 40 years ago and it does work. He also taught me to use book matches ( the "close cover before striking" kind) as a point gap gage.
George
I made my first testlamp from a discarded, all-plastic instrument lampholder -- the type that uses the 4-Watt wedge-based lamps -- whilst playing with my first CB77. My first bike, a Villiers-engined James Captain, had a magneto so a testlamp was useless.
Mine was ...fully insert paper and gently tug while tweaking the rotor, and when it breaks loose....bingo!
First testlamp was a flashlight with leads connected to the switch. When light goes off...bingo.
Then came the ohm-meter with buzzer (hi tech)!
Then a real timing light!!! (higher tech)!
Ask a modern day mechanic where his timing light is and see what happens!
66 dream, 78 cb750k, 02fz1, 09 wing
-
- h305 Moderator
- Posts: 2601
- Joined: Fri Oct 31, 2003 1:38 pm
- Location: Mallorca, Spain & Warsash, UK
We're all posting on this forum via one, I expect!brewsky wrote:............... Ask a modern day mechanic where his timing light is and see what happens!e3steve wrote:Christ, I'd forgotten that one! Just an edge between the (refaced) contacts, blow gently whilst tweaking the backplate.brewsky wrote:And how to set the timing with the celophane cigarette pack cover?gramey7 wrote:Jensen,
I don't think anyone can make fun of your screwdriver stethoscope. My father taught me that about 40 years ago and it does work. He also taught me to use book matches ( the "close cover before striking" kind) as a point gap gage.
George
I made my first testlamp from a discarded, all-plastic instrument lampholder -- the type that uses the 4-Watt wedge-based lamps -- whilst playing with my first CB77. My first bike, a Villiers-engined James Captain, had a magneto so a testlamp was useless.