Armen
Serious Thumper
   
Offline

Half-Witted Wrench-Jockey from Jersey
Posts: 1454
|
I got the studs out of mine by double-nutting them. Heating the head helps. The bikes are pretty low compression. If I had to guess, the squish band is prob pretty large. If I was working on it? Figure out what the squish clearance is. Considering the high compression pistons being sold for these sleds, I'd be more concerned with squish clearance than compression. I usually lay a piece of thick, soft solder (long enough to make it all the way across the piston crown) across the top of the piston, reassemble the motor with the used head gasket, and rotate the crank with a socket. The piston with flatten the solder. It doesn't hurt to do it twice-in line with the crank, and 90 degrees to the crank. Pull the head again, and measure the thickness of the solder where it was flattened at the edges. This is squish clearance. Less is good up to a point. The guys who have done a lot of these prob have a happy number in mind. If I had to guess, it'd be in the .035" range. So, you can wipe off the bottom of the head and the top of the cylinder until you make the squish band too tight. With crank flex and rod stretch, the piston can hit the underside of the head. Doing this will retard the cam timing a bit, but considering how most of the Savages seem to be running around with clapped out cam chains, it can't be that big a deal. Considering how far along you are, it seems like false economy not to pull the jug. Decarbonize the piston, measure the piston to cylinder clearance (something got hot enough for some reason to warp the head). Wipe a little of the top of the jug for good luck.
|