I've been wrestling with getting my '33 VL running and just can't seem to figure out why the front cylinder is not running. The bike will start and the rear cylinder heats up "normally", but the front never get more than 15 degrees above ambient temperature. I'm only running the bike for a minute or two, but in that time the rear cylinder easily reaches close to 200 degrees at the exhaust valve. I've verified the following:
Both spark plugs (D16s) produce a nice blue spark and are gapped to .030"
I've switched the spark plug wires at the coil which made no difference
Timing is set correctly (verified I am timed to the front cylinder by opening the front intake valve cover to watch when the valve closed as I rotated the engine) and the points are opening on the narrow end of the points cam
Point gap is set to .022"
Valves are adjusted correctly (.005" on intake and .007" on exhaust)
I checked the intake manifold for air leaks by mounting a plate on the front of the carb with a valve stem and pressuring the system
Valves were checked on the bench using a fluid leak down test to verify they were seating correctly (yes, I've had the cylinders off once already)
One thing to note is that while the bike is running, it is blowing out white vapor from the carb in time to the engine pulses.
My next step is to pull the cam cover and make sure the cams are timed correctly, but wanted to make sure I've exhausted all other checks before tearing back into the motor.
Any thoughts, guesses or speculation welcome!
Both spark plugs (D16s) produce a nice blue spark and are gapped to .030"
I've switched the spark plug wires at the coil which made no difference
Timing is set correctly (verified I am timed to the front cylinder by opening the front intake valve cover to watch when the valve closed as I rotated the engine) and the points are opening on the narrow end of the points cam
Point gap is set to .022"
Valves are adjusted correctly (.005" on intake and .007" on exhaust)
I checked the intake manifold for air leaks by mounting a plate on the front of the carb with a valve stem and pressuring the system
Valves were checked on the bench using a fluid leak down test to verify they were seating correctly (yes, I've had the cylinders off once already)
One thing to note is that while the bike is running, it is blowing out white vapor from the carb in time to the engine pulses.
My next step is to pull the cam cover and make sure the cams are timed correctly, but wanted to make sure I've exhausted all other checks before tearing back into the motor.
Any thoughts, guesses or speculation welcome!
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