newly finished build and not starting
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So with almost no compression, it will definitely never start regardless of your timing. Get that sorted and see how she does. Good luck.Comment
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Faced with low/different compression readings, you first need to adjust the valves CORRECTLY. Then do the compression test again, with the throttle wide open of course, and note any change. Then add a little oil to each combustion chamber and do the test again, again noting any change.
Then report back, and the crew here will advise.
JimComment
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I want to share an experience I found today.
I have been following this thread among others, and now experiencing a similarity, with a 1973 80" shovel I rebuilt over the winter, now weather good enough to oil & fuel it to try, only mine started and ran on only one cylinder.
Rear cylinder running cold, has spark at plug, front and rear cylinders 80 psi compression, new cylinder/piston/rings kit, new cylinder heads, recheck valve lash and is correct on solids.
I get to thinking that I know it is a dual fire ignition, so I swap plug wire positions on the coil, same results.
So I change the rear plug wire, (already put another set of plugs in), get same thing, cold rear head, no v-twin cadence, wet plug & plug has spark, huh?
So I go to the ignition module to take a look, and voila, one of the magnets in the rotor for the pick-up coil, was coming out.
I don't know how that happened, the other one was still covered in epoxy, now this one was returned to its slot, with a minute dab of pure silicon to hold it in place, and now she runs fine.Comment
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If comp comes up, good. Try to start her...
If not pull pushrods and do a "redneck leakdown"
If it's a fresh motor, might wanna re-torque the heads firstComment
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Yes, on one cylinder. Kick start too. It was a pan that had set for over 20 years. After a start and warm up, compression returned to normal (rings were stuck) and it is still running today. You need more experience.
JimComment
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I've got plenty of experience, you didn't specify you could get it going as long as one cylinder had compression. I'll agree with you on that. Plenty of different circumstances where the engine will only be running on one jug, as I know you're aware of. I was referring more to any idea of it actually running with no compression in either.Comment
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I've got plenty of experience, you didn't specify you could get it going as long as one cylinder had compression. I'll agree with you on that. Plenty of different circumstances where the engine will only be running on one jug, as I know you're aware of. I was referring more to any idea of it actually running with no compression in either.
JimComment
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I was thinkin' with that low compression, using a wheel roller to get the engine spinning faster than a kicker would help get it started...then a hill was mentioned^^^...If buildin' old school choppers was easy, anyone could do it... ain't nobody said it's gonna be easy...Comment
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