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whynot wrote:Might be time to look for fuel issues. If you have spark and the timing is still correct that would be the next one I would check. I would be tempted to put a few spoons worth of fuel down the carbie then try to start it. I think those motors have a sight glass on the fuel bowl so you may be able to see if it has fuel to the carb.
Crucible wrote:Very hard to say without looking at it but to find some direction spray engine start down the carb while someone cranks it over, no need to crash start it.
There are alot of variables but If you have pressure at the carb its quite rear to have zero fuel via carb into intake but start there first.
Make sure you fit new plugs first, if they are fuel fouled from alot of cranking etc it wont help.
Do the above and post back.
rollaholic wrote:when you say checked cambelt, how far did you actually disassemble? can you confirm the cam pulley is turning while turning the motor over via the crank pulley?
Crucible wrote:If you have fuel at the carb, thats all you need to check. Spraying engine start in the manifold will confirm that fuel is entering the manifold. Its just to find direction. Fuel, Spark or a Mechanical problem.
RS13 wrote:The 2E engines came with two types of carb - the standard venturi type and a problematic slide-type. Normally when a 2E with a slide-carb becomes a hard starter, it is due to the cold-start valve (drivers' side of the engine next to the carb, green and black with vacuum lines going to it) failing, causing a rich mixture and hard starting when hot.. or a worn slide mechanism itself, although neither sound like your fault as they aren't generally things that would stop a running car in its' tracks. Hard to know what to do.. if it were my engine, after checking that I've got spark, fuel and timing and still not getting anywhere, I'd try another carb. But then, with compression figures like those, it could be a waste of time spending money on troubleshooting if the rings/headgasket/valvetrain are toast!
RS13 wrote:So all four plugs are wet with fuel after cranking it over? And you're sure you've got a nice, fat spark?
RS13 wrote:Checking the timing in a 2E is pretty straightforward, whip the top cambelt cover off and you'll see a hole marked "2E" in the cam pulley. Wind the engine over by hand (ignition off etc) until the notch on the crank pulley lines up with the "0" on the plastic cover. The hole in the cam pulley should be pretty much in the 12 o'clock position, if you look through it you'll see a little dimple cast into the seal housing behind it which should be in the middle of the hole. If everything lines up, your cam timing is fine and if you take the distributor cap off, the rotor should be pointing more or less at the #1 lead electrode.
RS13 wrote:Was the radiator leaking? Was the car overheating when it died? And you're sure about those compression numbers, defintely 90,65,90,65 from 1 to 4? Or 90,90,65,65?
RS13 wrote:Sorry mate I was sure the lower cover had graduations on it. You can try looking down the front of the motor at the crank sprocket, it also has a notch which lines up with another raised dimple when at TDC.. have a read of this about halfway down the page, its' a 3E but crank sprocket is the same.
http://oldschool.co.nz/2011/forum/index ... ing-marks/
Jambun wrote:My next step was going to be clean out the carb but not sure if it'd be worth it.
Crucible wrote:Jambun wrote:My next step was going to be clean out the carb but not sure if it'd be worth it.
Does it fire with new plugs and engine start? Do that first.
RS13 wrote:If you're getting plenty of fuel to the plugs then there wouldn't be much point I'd say. When you said earlier that the spark was orange, did the new plugs give you a better spark? It is possible to have a spark but not enough to ignite the cylinder.. in the case of a failed coil etc. Had that recently actually, my workmate's 323 had cut out suddenly, it had everything it needed to run but it didn't.. swapped out the dizzy (internal coil) with a used one, found that the plugs sparked much more brightly, hooked it all up and it fired up first crank.
Anyway.. you've got fuel, spark and correct timing.. your compression numbers are pretty poor and from the sounds of it you've possibly got a blown headgasket, but it should still kick over/run albeit badly, even if only two cylinders were firing. You're getting to the stage where you're either going to have to start swapping out parts to troubleshoot (I'd start with the distributor, maybe even borrow one to try) or pay a mechanic to troubleshoot it for you.
Crucible wrote: I suspect with the numbers above it maybe gone between two cylinders, but its a guess without testing it properly.
RS13 wrote:Crucible wrote: I suspect with the numbers above it maybe gone between two cylinders, but its a guess without testing it properly.
I thought that too, however the low cylinders aren't adjacent to each other?
Crucible wrote:Yes you can check for headgasket leak with it running using a chemical test (tk) or do a leakdown test using compressed air. If it is bad enough and blown into a water jacket it will bubble of blow out the radiator while cranking. Top the rad up to the top of the neck and get someone to wind it over. I suspect with the numbers
Crucible wrote:You can earth a test light and check spark at a lead terminal.
Jambun wrote:
I've already done that by accident. I left the cap off and cranked it and spurted water everywhere.
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