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- Jul 16, 2007
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As promised here is an update to running the radial.
I had time this morning so I took the radial out to the garage and hooked everything up. Put some fuel in it, cranked it over a few times by hand to clear any oil and hooked up the starter motor.
After a couple of seconds of spinning it started to pop. As I adjusted the needle valve it got closer and closer. Finally it kept running, and on all five cylinders. After about 5-6 seconds one of the clamps started to come loose so I quickly switched of the ignition and reset the clamps.
Another spin with the starter and it fired right up. A little fine tuning with the needle and it was running, albeit at about half throttle. I had adjusted the barrel stop in the carb to let it run a little faster, and it was. I let it run for about 2 minutes and ran in to get the camera and set it up for a video.
Set up the camera, picked up the starter, gave it a crank, fired right up and then came to an instant and inglorious halt. I tried to turn the prop but it was jammed up tight.
Put away the camera, unhooked everything and headed to the shop.
After unbolting the prop, rear frame, carb, oil lines, inlet pipes and motor mounts I started taking the engine apart. It didn't take long to find one of the problems. After removing the rear crankcase cover and looking at the slave crank I could see a nice circular gouge in it. Reason: one of the rod wrist pins had backed out and jammed up tight against the slave crank disc.
Everything else looked good at this point but rather than have it this far apart and put it back together only to have something else go wrong I decided to take the cylinders off, pull the master rod and check out the bores and such.
I forgot to mention. The prop hub is driven by a cross pin (.078 dia.). When I first pulled the spinner and prop off I could see the drive pin was bent on both sides of the crankshaft, it's drill rod mind you. The engine had stopped so instantly that if bent the drive pin into a lazy S shape. I had to grind one side off so I could pull it out the other side. The crankshaft stayed true it just elongated the hole a little.
The bores all look good and everything turns over nice and smooth so I'll start putting it back together. I just have to come up with a way of locking the crank wrist pins in place. I'm thinking of drilling and tapping at right angles through the master rod at each pin location and Loctiting a small set screw into it. There's not much room for anything else.
At least I know that it runs.
gbritnell
I had time this morning so I took the radial out to the garage and hooked everything up. Put some fuel in it, cranked it over a few times by hand to clear any oil and hooked up the starter motor.
After a couple of seconds of spinning it started to pop. As I adjusted the needle valve it got closer and closer. Finally it kept running, and on all five cylinders. After about 5-6 seconds one of the clamps started to come loose so I quickly switched of the ignition and reset the clamps.
Another spin with the starter and it fired right up. A little fine tuning with the needle and it was running, albeit at about half throttle. I had adjusted the barrel stop in the carb to let it run a little faster, and it was. I let it run for about 2 minutes and ran in to get the camera and set it up for a video.
Set up the camera, picked up the starter, gave it a crank, fired right up and then came to an instant and inglorious halt. I tried to turn the prop but it was jammed up tight.
Put away the camera, unhooked everything and headed to the shop.
After unbolting the prop, rear frame, carb, oil lines, inlet pipes and motor mounts I started taking the engine apart. It didn't take long to find one of the problems. After removing the rear crankcase cover and looking at the slave crank I could see a nice circular gouge in it. Reason: one of the rod wrist pins had backed out and jammed up tight against the slave crank disc.
Everything else looked good at this point but rather than have it this far apart and put it back together only to have something else go wrong I decided to take the cylinders off, pull the master rod and check out the bores and such.
I forgot to mention. The prop hub is driven by a cross pin (.078 dia.). When I first pulled the spinner and prop off I could see the drive pin was bent on both sides of the crankshaft, it's drill rod mind you. The engine had stopped so instantly that if bent the drive pin into a lazy S shape. I had to grind one side off so I could pull it out the other side. The crankshaft stayed true it just elongated the hole a little.
The bores all look good and everything turns over nice and smooth so I'll start putting it back together. I just have to come up with a way of locking the crank wrist pins in place. I'm thinking of drilling and tapping at right angles through the master rod at each pin location and Loctiting a small set screw into it. There's not much room for anything else.
At least I know that it runs.
gbritnell