I am helping a friend with a Panhaed and we are stumped. Here’s what we have:
The main problem is the front cylinder runs lean, the rear rich. When hot and idling the front cylinder starts puffing smoke (can’t tell for sure black or blue) when it idles. New V-Twin heads were put on that developed scored valve stems and mushroomed valve ends (rocker side) after a few hundred miles. The valves were replaced, valve sets cut and ground, new valve guides installed and new valve seals. The problem still persisted so we ran a air compressor test. With the push rods REMOVED (i.e. both intake and exhaust closed), a compressor fitting for the spark plug and the air compressor set for 50 pounds there are air leaks.
The dilemma is the air is leaking out the heads where the pushrod tubes go. We confirmed this by putting our fingers over the pushrod openings in the head and also with smoke. There is no doubt that air is escaping through those holes with the front worse than the rear. It does not seem to be from the crankcase because it follows the head the compressor/spark plug fitting is in (note: there was always a spark plug installed in the head that was not being pressurized.)
Given the valves, valve guides and seals have all be replaced, what could be the path to allow air to escape from inside the cylinder and come out the push rod openings in the head? Is there another test we can do to narrow this down?
Ronald V. Papasso
#3129
The main problem is the front cylinder runs lean, the rear rich. When hot and idling the front cylinder starts puffing smoke (can’t tell for sure black or blue) when it idles. New V-Twin heads were put on that developed scored valve stems and mushroomed valve ends (rocker side) after a few hundred miles. The valves were replaced, valve sets cut and ground, new valve guides installed and new valve seals. The problem still persisted so we ran a air compressor test. With the push rods REMOVED (i.e. both intake and exhaust closed), a compressor fitting for the spark plug and the air compressor set for 50 pounds there are air leaks.
The dilemma is the air is leaking out the heads where the pushrod tubes go. We confirmed this by putting our fingers over the pushrod openings in the head and also with smoke. There is no doubt that air is escaping through those holes with the front worse than the rear. It does not seem to be from the crankcase because it follows the head the compressor/spark plug fitting is in (note: there was always a spark plug installed in the head that was not being pressurized.)
Given the valves, valve guides and seals have all be replaced, what could be the path to allow air to escape from inside the cylinder and come out the push rod openings in the head? Is there another test we can do to narrow this down?
Ronald V. Papasso
#3129
Comment