Re: [2cylinderhondas] Re: Some advice would be great!

Archived posts from the ANZ Honda 600 Owners Yahoo Group
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friend
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Joined: Fri Sep 14, 2012 10:54 pm

Re: [2cylinderhondas] Re: Some advice would be great!

Post by friend »

Julian;
   Looking for spark:
Need to know things about the Honda 600.
- Both plugs need to be attached to the coil and grounded if out of the engine to complete the circuit and give a spark.  If either is not connected then there is no spark.
- Because the wires are screwed into the plug connecting ends (caps), these need to be looked at to ensure they are touching wire and not just insulation.
- Also the caps are manufactured with a small wire inside to grab the threads at the end of the plug is this wire is missing (and some are) then it will have a poor or no connection to the plug.
- You can check to see if your coil is good by using an OHM meter to touching both leads to see if they are connected.  If you have a reading at around 32 it is a good sign.  Do the same with the black and blue wires, they should also have a reading.   If either of these checks come up with no reading then the coil may be the problem.  But, using a needle push it into the base of the wires to see if there is a reading there, as many times the wire is broken at its base causing a disconnect.  There is a fix for the coil on the
anzhonda600owners group site.  In the 40 some years I have been working on old cars wires seem to be most of the problems.
Bill
> -----Original Message-----
> From:
> 2cylinderhondas@yahoogroups.com [mailto:2cylinderhondas@yahoogroups.com] > On > Behalf Of > Julian > Sent:
> Wednesday, March 09, 2011 11:46
> PM
> To:
> 2cylinderhondas@yahoogroups.com
> Subject:
> [2cylinderhondas] Re: Some advice would be great!
> Thanks for the timing info Dale.
> After doing a bunch of stuff over the
> past few days to see if the old z would start yesterday I finally tried to > start her up.
> And....!!!! It didn't start, So after asking my 12 year
> old brother a to turn the key so I could test for spark I found that there was > none.
> The spark plug was wet though, so I am getting gas!!
> I'm
> really hopping that once the no spark issue is solved that it might fire > up!!
> And I will check the timing now that I have some info on how to.
> Also when I originally manually turned the engine, before hand i > lubricated the top end, I assumed little to no oil would probably make it up > there.
> --- In
> 2cylinderhondas@yahoogroups.com
> ,
> goinhm@... wrote:
> > Here are some things to try for an engine
> which will not start;
> > 1) squirt some motor oil in
> each cylinder (1/2 tablespoon is plenty) and
> > perform a compression
> test. A great reading would be 160 psi on each
> > cylinder
> > 2) turn over the engine until you see the points are closed. Remove a
> > spark plug, connect the plug wire back onto a new spark plug and hold > the > > threaded portion of the plug against the metal engine block, turn > the > > ignition switch on and crank over the engine. You should see a > strong spark > > jumping across the plug gap. Do the same thing for the > other spark plug. You > > may need a helper to crank over the engine or > you can use a remote starter.
> > 3) with a spark plug removed,
> turn over the engine and verify the piston
> > is at top dead center when
> the mark on the crank pulley is opposite the
> > "T" on the crankcase.
> This will verify someone did not get the pulley out of
> > phase by 180
> degrees.
> > 4) with the mark on the pulley opposite the "T" on
> the crankcase, look
> > at the driver side on the camshaft. You want to
> see the notch on the cam
> > centered in the driver side cam housing. If
> it isn't, your cam timing is
> > off.
> > If you have good
> compression, spark on the plugs, proper cam timing,
> > you are very
> close to getting the engine to run. Carb problems, fuel supply
> problems, or air leaks can also prevent it from running. BTW, turning
> over the engine by hand or with the starter motor doesn't really lubricate
> > the critical parts of the engine. The roller bearing design of the > crank > > can handle oil starvation for short periods of time. The cam > housing and > > pistons need oil to work properly. Remove the cam cover > and spray some motor > > oil at each of the rocker arms (the housing > where they pivot and where they > > contact the valves), where the rocker > arms contact the cam, and the cam > > housing where the cam rests. A > little oil in each cylinder will also help > > .... just a > little.
> > good luck,
> > Dale
> > I have some
> new points and condenser, and I checked and added a bunch of > > oil > because it was low. And manually turned over the engine a bunch of times
> > to move the oil around and get it lubricated before I tried to start > it > > with the ignition.
> > It did have spark a year ago.
> I Need to check the timing, is there any
> > write ups on the proper
> steps and instructions to do this?
> > I live in the little town
> of Walla Walla Wa, I don't think there is anyone
> > locally that knows
> much about these cars. Or from what i have gathered.
> > Thanks
> for all the help this far guys!
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