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![]() "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Sun, 24 Oct 2004 18:28:50 GMT, "Mr Wizzard" wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message .. . On Sun, 24 Oct 2004 03:10:04 GMT, "Mr Wizzard" wrote: Got an old Monkey Wards Sea King .7.5 by Chrysler, and I am stumped. It won't run on the bottom cylinder, not matter what I do. So far, I've : changed the head, head gasket, coil, converted to electronic ignition, went over the carb (twice), two new sets of plugs, looked at the reed valves, and it STILL won't run regularly on that bottom cylinder. Runs fine on the top cylinder, and every now and then you hear I occasionally hear it pop and shutter, and hear it kick in, but for the most part, the bottom cylinder won't run. Plug just black, sometime fluffy black, sometime wet black. I even looked at the fuel pump diaphragm under a magnifier glass, and it too looks fine. So what the heck could I be missing here? Compression is at 150 Lbs. I just don't get it. The only thing I can think of is the bottom crankcase seal is bad, and I'm sucking in air or water or something. I even took off the exhaust manifold plate to make sure the exhaust port wasn't plugged. Peeked in the exhaust port, and the edge of the piston looks fine. Surely someone have the missing clue, help!! Power pack? What is a "power pack" ? ...This is an old Sea King 7.5 with "type A" (I think) iginition, it's like a lawn mower, has one coil, one condenser, and one set of breaker points for each of the two cylingers, all of which is under the flywheel (which has just one magnet). Hey, it was a shot in the dark. :) I didn't see an answer, so I thought I'd throw it out. My experience is with much later 2 cycle engines and not much at that, although I have rebuilt one or two. A power pack is similar to a coil in an auto. Surely someone must have some insight to this total mystery ?? I've been working on small engines, and specifically 2-strokes for a long-long times, so this unsolved mystery has been having a huge inpact on my life (and my shop, my time, and everything else). From my limited knowledge of this subject, I would think crank seal. Yeah, well, thats what its getting down to, huh? Actually, makes sence too, because if you think about it, its the *only* part so far that I'm not able to "visually inspect", so it it truely an unknown. Wanna hear something scary? - I got the service manual, right?. And this is the mother of all service manuals too I might add - it reads like the guys diary, the auther is VERY chatty. Anyway, in this area, he says this: In almost ALL cases on very old engines, and almost *definetly* on a salt water motor, the drive shaft to crankshaft spline with be frozen, and you have to drill a large hole in the intermeadiate housing (leg), reach in with a cutting torch and cut the drive shaft (to get the power head seperated). Of course, he doesn't say how to get the frozen cut off piece of the shaft out of the crankshaft spline. Wondering if the motor is worth it at this point. Was given to me with the "see if it runs, and give me what you think its worth" disclaimer - it hasn't run in 8 years. So I got $100 into it, and its either go all the way, or eat the $100. The cutting of the drive shaft/torch doesn't bother me, hell I recently did exactally that with this old 1974 Sears Gamefisher to where I had to TIG weld the clutch solid. I dunno. To boot, I just got a brand new 2005 Johnson 8 for my 9 foot Zodiac, (and man do I like life over that !!). This old, near freebee was to be for my neighbor who really needs something. But to be honest, its really more for my special love of reviving an old engine and seeing it run, and get used. But of late, not sure that has much value anymore - I'd love to get my work bench back. Thanks for listening! Later, Tom "Beware the one legged man in a butt kicking contest - he is there for a reason." Wun Hung Lo - date unknown |
#2
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On Sun, 24 Oct 2004 19:25:59 GMT, "Mr Wizzard"
wrote: ~~ snippage ~~ But to be honest, its really more for my special love of reviving an old engine and seeing it run, and get used. But of late, not sure that has much value anymore - I'd love to get my work bench back. I hear you brother. My particular love was a 1950 International Pickup. It was a totally trashed 1950 L-110 that I restored and ran as a daily until I couldn't drive it anymore due to the manual three on the tree. I've done a couple of others over my lifetime - something about those older trucks. Later, Tom |
#3
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![]() "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Sun, 24 Oct 2004 19:25:59 GMT, "Mr Wizzard" wrote: ~~ snippage ~~ But to be honest, its really more for my special love of reviving an old engine and seeing it run, and get used. But of late, not sure that has much value anymore - I'd love to get my work bench back. I hear you brother. My particular love was a 1950 International Pickup. It was a totally trashed 1950 L-110 that I restored and ran as a daily until I couldn't drive it anymore due to the manual three on the tree. I've done a couple of others over my lifetime - something about those older trucks. Man can I relate! Comes from my younger years I guess. Just to "know" that not only did you get it running, and going, but that you made it "solid". i.e. put more life into it with new parts, etc. etc. Good stuff!. Later, Tom |
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