Re: Measuring Radiator FlowOn Jan 23, 8:35 am, oldgeezer <schreuder...@yahoo . com > wrote:
> On 22 jan, 23:50, Manjo <manjo1...@gmail . com > wrote:
>
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>
>
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> > On Jan 21, 4:51 pm, oldgeezer <schreuder...@yahoo . com > wrote:
>
> > > On Jan 21, 9:03 pm, Manjo <manjo1...@gmail . com > wrote:
>
> > > > Is there a DIY method to measure the flow-rate of coolant through a
> > > > motorcycle radiator? My bike is 12 years old and I'm wondering if
> > > > there's been enough scale build-up in the radiator fins to reduce flow-
> > > > rate and the water-cooling efficiency of the radiator. I've looked in
> > > > the bike service manual and it gives no information on how to test for
> > > > flow rate. TIA for any tips or suggestions.
>
> > > > Manjo
>
> > > What kind of unforeseen, mysterious problems does your
> > > bike surprises you with?
> > > Temp needle in red zone?
> > > You get hot knees?
> > > It steams all the way?
> > > It burbs when you switch it off?
>
> > > In other words, if there aren't any problems,
> > > why do you search for a cause?
>
> > > Just think for a second. Why would the manual
> > > not define a flow rate, let alone how many miles
> > > you may ride before you need to check it.
>
> > > Rob.
>
> > Hi Rob,
>
> > Thanks for your thoughts. Perhaps you could help if I give you more
> > information.
> > I ride a V-twin with 125k miles (117k miles are mine). In warm
> > weather (above 80 degrees F) the bike will stall out at stops while
> > the rpm's fall under 800 rpm.
>
> > I've rejetted the carbs, sync'd the carbs, set and reset the idle
> > speed, cleaned the air filters, confirmed the cam settings, changed
> > the fuel filter, checked the fuel pump flow, etc. I'm pulling the
> > engine this winter and checking the bore and heads. I have to
> > disconnect the radiator again and can easily test it standalone. I'm
> > looking to eliminate as many heat causing and heat dissipating
> > possiblilities as I can while I have the engine out and apart. Low or
> > slow coolant flow could cause an overheating problem. What are the
> > other possibilites to check?
>
> > Thanks, Manjo
>
> Rob Kleinschmidt wrote that he never owned a water cooled bike
> thus 'speculates' it would be good to flush the radiator.
> Well, this is sound advise, no matter what state the radiator
> is in.
>
> Myself, besides a couple of air cooled, I only have owned 3 water
> cooled bikes. The first was 18 years old, second bike was 20, and
> my current one is almost 25 years.
> None of them ever showed any scaling of the radiator.
>
> You now describe your problem as: at warm weather, bike
> drops below 800 revs, then stalls.
>
> Idle at 800 revs is pretty low. Is that what your manual says?
> The bikes I have had all were around 1100-1300 revs.
> The on-board 'revcounter' (if any) usually is crude
> and should not be used to adjust idle.
>
> I think the radiator has nothing to do with your problem.
> If the bike has a temp-gauge, it should read between
> the red lines, also in warm weather. If it does not,
> then the thermostat could be defective, and there should be
> a description on how to test it in your manual, or
> the fan, or thermo contact, or wiring, or even the water pump
> could be defective.
>
> To set your mind at ease, check the piping for scaling. Easy
> to check visually. I bet you won't find it.
>
> Your idea is: "Engine stalls because engine gets too warm"
> But, if warm weather really is the cause, then every air cooled
> engine would have the same problem.
>
> Personally, I'd search in the fuel/carburettor area for the cause
> of your problem.
>
> And, since you're unmount the radiator anyway, take
> Rob Kleinschmidt's advise. Flush the thing. If it does not
> help, it will not harm anyway.
>
> Rob.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
Rob and Rob,
Thanks for the ideas and logic.
I will have the radiator flushed boiled out.
I mislead on 800 rpm. I have the idle set at 1,000 rpm and as the
outside temperature approaches 80 degrees F, the bike's idle speed
decreases and the bike runs rough at stops and as the heat increases,
the engine will stall. I have never had a problem re-starting the
bike. When this happens in stop and go traffic, I'm especially
careful to down shift so that at just before a full stop, I have run
the bike in 1st gear for several yards. This tends to reduce the
stalling some. This has led me to also consider the fuel system as
the possible source of the stalling problem (vapor lock??).
I ran a leak down test on the bike myself and had less than 2% overall
compression loss. This was after I had the cylinders honed and
installed new rings and checked/lapped-in the valves.
NOTE: Last spring I installed and broke in new rings/honed cylinders
"easy" by riding under 50 mph over 500 miles. I'm thinking now I
should have broken them in hard varying the speed between 40-60 mph
over 500 miles to better seat the new rings. I say this because I see
a lot of carbon build-up on the cylinder heads that I remove once in a
while with Sea Foam end. The carbon has also been a concern in that
it may be causing pre-ignition at idle enough to cause stalling? END
NOTE.
When I get the heads and cylinders off, I'm borrowing a bore gauge to
check the cylinders for out-of-round that may be allowing oil to seep
around the rings at high speed and burn-off on the piston crowns
leaving the carbon build-up. I'm also going to ask the machine shop
guys to check the heads/ valves just in case oil is leaking around the
valve guides (I installed new valve seals last spring).
I feel I'm intimately familiar with engine by having taken it apart
and refurbishing/replacing many parts, but I lack the real shop
experience of having fixing many different bikes with the same
problem. I also have no fear of pulling the bike/engine apart and
trying proposed solutions.
Thanks, Manjo