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Only 1 cylender firing?

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18K views 115 replies 8 participants last post by  MrMyles  
#1 ·
Went for a ride a couple weeks ago, all was right with the world.
Parked the bike and before I shut it down I heard a ticking sound. Not overly loud, but audible and constant. It was late so I shut it down and went inside, would check into it later.

A week later I had forgotten all about it, fire it up to go for a short ride. I hear the ticking right away. But it runs and revs fine. Noise does not get louder, but does not go away. Get to the stop sign a block away and the bike dies when I try to leave the stop.

Both red lights on dash come on, green light goes off, speedo light goes off, headlight goes off. Bike cannot shift into any gear. Cannot be started.

Turn key off, then on again and all lights are normal, bike starts fine. Ticking is heard. Twist throttle and it dies.

Turn key off, then on again and all lights are normal, bike starts fine. Ticking is heard. Twist throttle and it dies.

Turn key off, then on again and all lights are normal, bike starts fine. Ticking is heard. Pull out choke, twist throttle and all is normal. Put choke in and it dies.

Pulled choke and rode it gently back a block. Ran fine for the block, with choke all the way out.

Got home, shut it down. Let it sit while I went and did my errands in my van (far less interesting).

Fast forward another week to 2 days ago. I decide winter has arrived (well, mother nature decided) so it is time to park it in the garage.

I start it up, full choke and notice right away it ain't right. Sounds like a wounded dirt bike. Dies without full choke, runs rough, wants to die, sounds like only 1 cylinder is firing.

Checked sight glass, oil level appears fine.
Pulled plugs. Both black on top. Front plug is black and dry. Rear plug is black and slightly oily.

Thoughts?

2002 Vulcan 800 Classic.
 
#2 ·
A couple of thoughts come to mind:
1.) What kind of condition is the battery in?
2.) When's the last time the bike had a valve check and adjustment?
3.) What kind of condition are the spark plugs in?
4.) How do the plug wires look?
5.) What kind of condition are the intake boots in?

Just a few thoughts.
 
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#3 ·
Thanks for the quick response.

1.) What kind of condition is the battery in?
- Brand new in April this year.

2.) When's the last time the bike had a valve check and adjustment?
- Late August 2012 they were checked/adjusted at 34,000 KM. Currently sitting at 51,000 KM.

3.) What kind of condition are the spark plugs in?
- Both black on top. Front plug is black and dry. Rear plug is black and slightly oily.

A couple of thoughts come to mind:
4.) How do the plug wires look?
- Will check when I get home tonight.

A couple of thoughts come to mind:
5.) What kind of condition are the intake boots in?
- Will check when I get home tonight.
 
#5 ·
When you describe the oil around one of the plugs, it sounds like the spark plug hole gasket in that cylinder needs to be replaced - hence the oil around the threads and electrode of the spark plug wire.

Have you seen oil in the airbox by any chance?
 
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#7 ·
There was oil in the airbox.

I noticed the carb was not very secure, boot was not very tight.
Took the carb off completely to take it apart and clean it.
Winter plan was to reject the carb, may as well start now.

Picture of spark plugs attached.

Plug boots and wires look good. Not cracked, split or loose. No oil or other materials on them. Clean and dry.
 

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#8 ·
Looks like the bike's been running rich, or possibly low quality fuel. Not a lot to do there except get fuel from a different gas station.

As for one cylinder completely shutting down, the only suspicion I have now is that the coil isn't delivering spark to the cylinder. Either that, or the plug wire is corroded internally, or possibly broken.

The loose intake boot would make the bike run lean more than anything. Potentially could keep the bike from running right, but it would have to be sucking in a LOT of air on that one cylinder to shut it down.

At this point, though, it sounds electrical. If the coil is OEM, that could be the culprit. If the plug wires are OEM, then they could be brittle and possibly have broken internally. A multimeter would answer the question pretty quickly - take one lead, touch one end of the plug wire and touch the other one to the opposite end. If there's an excessive amount of resistance, then that would be what's going on.

As for checking the coil, this link gives a pretty decent rundown: How to Test a Motorcycle Ignition Coil | DoItYourself.com
 
#9 ·
The loose intake was more of a "hey, look at that" type of thing.

Carb has been cleaned. Was not horrible, but not sparkly either. The slide and needle were pretty black though.

Went to get new plugs and all 3 of the shops I went to had none. 1 does not carry them at all, the other two carry a few but were sold out. Trying a fourth shop tonight. Once I get new plugs I will start testing the electrical.

NOT a fan of anything electrical, so hoping for the best and simplest solution.
 

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#11 ·
I have had the tank off many times with nothing more than a drop of gas spilled. Yesterday, I smelled gas. I have the tank sitting on an old tire at the back of the garage. I lift it up and see the ground is wet. 10 minutes later, I get an email alert about a reply to this thread. Reply was about a fuel leak.

Freaky!

Will order a new petcock before I put it all back together. Crossing my fingers that a clean carb, secure boots, new plugs and non-leaking tap will cure the issue and get it running right.
 
#13 ·
No love.

Carb reassembled and reinstalled. Clean and tight.

New spark plugs installed.

Tank back on.

Full choke and start it up. Runs normal for a minute then backfires. I reduce the choke, it pops and dies.

I pull choke and start it again and it is back to sounding terrible. Really rough.

Checked the pipes and both are hot, so both cylendars are firing

Here is a video if that helps.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/wvj09ixjmk6lb5i/VID_20151103_200857.mp4?dl=0
Thoughts?
 
#15 ·
1. No. Very small drip from tap. It will be replaced, but will take a few weeks to get the part (not available locally).

2) Never checked valves before. I have the manual, will look into it and see if I can do it. They were checked/adjusted at the the 30,000km or so point. Current just over 50,000 km.

Thanks
 
#16 ·
I would check the valves before doing anything else because if you have a tight one, you can play with everything else until the screws are worn out and get nowhere.
Also, if the fuel tap is dribbling when the bike sits, it will cause problems too. If bad enough, it can fill your crankcase with gas....not a good thing.
 
#17 ·
I will start on the valve check tomorrow evening. Running tight on time this week.

Fuel tap can be ordered on Friday, delivery in a week or two. I can get a rebuild kit in 3-4 days for 1/3 the price. Thinking it is worth the extra time/money just to buy a direct replacement.

Thanks
 
#21 ·
Took the tank off last night and start removing everything to do the valves.

1) Yep, tank leaks. Far more than I originally thought. Will order a new petcock when I determine what shims I need so I can order all at once.

2) Front spark plug still looks brand new. Rear plug was slightly wet and slightly black.

Bike was running for all of 4 minutes since installing new plugs, so I assume my issue is with the rear jug. Will go through both obviously, but I assume I will find an issue back there.
 
#23 ·
Will do, however it will be a week at least before the new tap arrives.

From what I have read about the valves though, I should check them since it has been 20,000km since last checked/adjusted.
But I will do the tap first and move on from there.

Winter has arrived, so no big rush to get it running today or anything.
 
#24 ·
Petcock arrived and has been replaced. Chnaged the oil/filter. Fresh premium gas. The new spark plugs. Cleaned the air filter.

Fire it up and it is okay while it warms up on choke. Sounds a little...off but not outrageously so.

Twist the throttle and it hesitates.

Turn off choke and it dies as soon as I twist throttle.

Start again on choke, go play with dog for 2 minutes, come back and turn off choke. Sounds rough on idle but does not die when giving throttle. Sounds very, very rough when giving throttle. Not right.

Engine has an odd sound too when idling. Not sure how to explain it, but kind of like TV Static if that makes sense.

Too a video of it, will add it when I can upload it.
 
#32 ·
Sorry, should have clarified. That engine photo was not mine, googled it. Though it is the same engine, just out of the frame so easier to point out items.

I remeasured the front cylinder clearance (always good to recheck) and discovered I was wrong on all 4. No idea how, I checked six times. But rechecking all now, with no changes, it is different.
:/

Front cylinder:
Exhaust 1: 0.18mm (20 will go but very tight)
Exhaust 2: 0.18mm (20 will go, but very tight)
Inlet 1: 0.05mm
Inlet 2: 0.03mm (a little tight but smallest I have)

Rear cylinder:
Inlet 1: 0.09mm
Inlet 2: 0.10mm
Exhaust 1: 0.23mm
Exhaust 2; 0.23mm

Not at all what I was expecting to be honest. All 4 front need swapping out. 1 rear needs swapping.

Should I replace the .10mm on the rear while I am at it as preventative maintenance?

Also, after I removed the rear cover I noticed it was quite dirty along the seal. Almost a rusty colour. The front however is very clean and clear.