... well, the bottom end anyway. My '94 KX80 seized its lower rod bearing, silly me thought I'd save a lot of money by doing as much of the work myself as possible. I had to get a local machine shop to split the crank and put the new rod on it, everything else I thought I could handle. I printed out all the diagrams and asked a lot of questions of a couple friends who have done this before (but have moved away, so this was done online)... All went pretty well, it even started first try after reassembly...
... then promptly stalled and wouldn't restart.
Backing up a tiny bit, I called a local Kawasaki place expecting to order a new gasket to go between the case halves. I was informed that there wasn't one, but that they used, and I quote, "gasket maker". No further detail was given. I could see that the last guy who did this engine ALSO used a chemical compound, which was red and could be seen where it overlapped the seam. So I went to the hardware store for 'gasket maker'. The last guy used red stuff, but there was a warning on that saying it wasn't gas/oil-resistant, so I wound up with the black stuff. Another call to another Kawasaki place (after the whole thing was put back together) revealed there's a SPECIFIC chemical they use, 3-bond #1194, which is neither red nor black (it's gray), so I used the wrong stuff. I am now pretty well convinced that's my problem, but I wanted to run this by the folks on here before I tear the whole thing apart again.
Any time I drain the oil and let it sit for a while, then partially refill, kick it over a few times with the plug wire disconnected and just barely enough oil in there to keep it lubricated, then fill it back up, hook up the plug wire, and try again, it'll run for a short while. Pretty much long enough to go up and down the driveway a couple times, then it stalls. Trying repeatedly to start it results in a single fire every 5-6 kicks, but no actual running.
I have verified that there is spark. I also blew air through the carburetor, getting a spray mist of fuel out the other side, so that appears to be working as well.
I do have compression, although not as much as I would expect.
The oil visible through the window in the clutch cover turns white. Shortly thereafter it disappears altogether.
My THEORY is that I have a leak (due to having used the wrong compound) between the bottom crank area and the transmission. Oil gets sucked into the crank area gradually and effectively alters the oil/gas mix ratio, eventually to the point where ignition fails.
Valid theory? Or is something else more likely?
... then promptly stalled and wouldn't restart.
Backing up a tiny bit, I called a local Kawasaki place expecting to order a new gasket to go between the case halves. I was informed that there wasn't one, but that they used, and I quote, "gasket maker". No further detail was given. I could see that the last guy who did this engine ALSO used a chemical compound, which was red and could be seen where it overlapped the seam. So I went to the hardware store for 'gasket maker'. The last guy used red stuff, but there was a warning on that saying it wasn't gas/oil-resistant, so I wound up with the black stuff. Another call to another Kawasaki place (after the whole thing was put back together) revealed there's a SPECIFIC chemical they use, 3-bond #1194, which is neither red nor black (it's gray), so I used the wrong stuff. I am now pretty well convinced that's my problem, but I wanted to run this by the folks on here before I tear the whole thing apart again.
Any time I drain the oil and let it sit for a while, then partially refill, kick it over a few times with the plug wire disconnected and just barely enough oil in there to keep it lubricated, then fill it back up, hook up the plug wire, and try again, it'll run for a short while. Pretty much long enough to go up and down the driveway a couple times, then it stalls. Trying repeatedly to start it results in a single fire every 5-6 kicks, but no actual running.
I have verified that there is spark. I also blew air through the carburetor, getting a spray mist of fuel out the other side, so that appears to be working as well.
I do have compression, although not as much as I would expect.
The oil visible through the window in the clutch cover turns white. Shortly thereafter it disappears altogether.
My THEORY is that I have a leak (due to having used the wrong compound) between the bottom crank area and the transmission. Oil gets sucked into the crank area gradually and effectively alters the oil/gas mix ratio, eventually to the point where ignition fails.
Valid theory? Or is something else more likely?