Register FAQ Community Calendar Today's Posts Search
Go Back   ScootDawg Forums > Performance :: Maintenance :: Technical > 125cc - 249cc
Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old 08-12-2014, 12:05 PM   #16
ragtopdodge   ragtopdodge is offline
 
ragtopdodge's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2014
Posts: 9
This happened to me too! My Il Bello (150cc) had about 2500 miles on it. Ran great!

This totally sux.




Login or Register to Remove Ads
  Reply With Quote
Old 08-12-2014, 12:16 PM   #17
ragtopdodge   ragtopdodge is offline
 
ragtopdodge's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2014
Posts: 9
Although in MY case, clearly the piston melted as well.
  Reply With Quote
Old 08-13-2014, 08:47 AM   #18
rks   rks is offline
 
rks's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2013
Location: Western New York
Posts: 454
Don't know caused these problems, or how scooters were operated/maintained....and of course, defective parts will cause catastrophic failure....however I feel that monitoring as much as possible, may catch an abnormal condition before something lets go.

So my scoot had it's speakers jerked out, and in the resulting holes, gauges were installed. Maybe not the best location for viewing while driving, but still more useful than speakers on a scooter.....and I would certainly notice high oil temps before melting the engine...Bob

[IMG][/IMG]
__________________
2011 Jonway 150cc..16,109 breakdown free miles, and counting




Login or Register to Remove Ads
  Reply With Quote
Old 08-13-2014, 01:22 PM   #19
ragtopdodge   ragtopdodge is offline
 
ragtopdodge's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2014
Posts: 9
Not a bad idea.
  Reply With Quote
Old 08-13-2014, 09:01 PM   #20
Swordsman   Swordsman is offline
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Posts: 40
Quote:
Originally Posted by ragtopdodge View Post
This happened to me too! My Il Bello (150cc) had about 2500 miles on it. Ran great!

This totally sux.

Ah, ye olde holy piston! Any time I've ever heard of this, it's been due to running lean. Possible reasons for lean condition: air leak, incorrect jetting, vacuum operated petcock for the fuel supply. At high RPMs, vacuum petcocks may not react quickly enough, starving the carb for gas and throwing your air/fuel ratio off. Older Urals are (in)famous for it.

(You may notice I reference Urals a lot. They require a lot of tinkering, so it's the bike I have the most mechanical experience with! )



Login or Register to Remove Ads
  Reply With Quote
Old 08-19-2014, 09:28 AM   #21
carasdad   carasdad is offline
 
carasdad's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: South Haven Michigan
Posts: 225
Quote:
Originally Posted by Swordsman View Post
I find this one extremely unlikely. Octane isn't increased in fuel grades for more power, it's increased to slow combustion so you don't get pre-detonation (aka spark knock or pinging) with more aggressive cam timing. Longer octane chains are slower to break down as they burn.

I suspect there was a valve clearance issue, maybe when it pulls the valve closed. If it got really tight, it might have popped the valve head off since they're not exactly quality materials. Isn't that the exhaust side? I know the exhaust valve on my Ural used to get tighter over time while my intake valve got looser. I assume it was from the heat.

Looks like there could be some wear around the break point also, but I have no idea how that would occur because I don't know how scooter valves are put together. Maybe that's just from it banging around inside the chamber before it battle-axed the piston.

~SM
TOTALLY agree!! and this is one of THE biggest misconceptions about high octane fuel! Folks believe higher octane = more power cause it burns faster. Yes Sir...you are correct..it burns slower as to prevent detonation in high compression engines. In my Scoots it actually decreases performance.. Folks say.. "But my manual says to use 91 octane or better" Here is where the confusion comes in.. Ya see..in European and Asian countries they use a different formula. They use RON only..which translates 91 octane in their gas to 87 octane in the U.S. where we use the (RON+MON)/2 formula. READ the little decal on your local gas station pump...it even says octane is based on (RON+MON)/2.. Here is a good link..a good read that should clear up the confusion on octane ratings that are posted so often on here. I have a 2003 Tank Urban Sporty 50 that has seen NOTHING but 87 for all of it's 21,200 miles so far. Whole engine is all original still...but is about due for rings..which is not bad for that much mileage. ok..the link..read and heed..
http://www.pencilgeek.org/2009/05/oc...nversions.html

In regards to your valve to piston collision...I have seen this a few times in my Scooter parts/repair shop. It is caused by a stretched timing chain and or a weak or defective chain tensioner. What happens is that the chain jumps or slips a few teeth on the Cam or Crankshaft gear...this causes it to jump valve timing so that the valve is open as the piston comes up. What appears as pitting or melting of the piston is actually just scarring from the broken metal pieces being scattered around... Just my 2 cents... I only work on Scooters for a living..so I may be wrong...
Glenn
  Reply With Quote
Old 08-20-2014, 07:25 AM   #22
cheapeto   cheapeto is offline
 
cheapeto's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: York PA
Posts: 339
Great post Glen!!
__________________
Ride For Kids.org
  Reply With Quote
Old 08-21-2014, 08:29 AM   #23
carasdad   carasdad is offline
 
carasdad's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: South Haven Michigan
Posts: 225
Quote:
Originally Posted by cheapeto View Post
Great post Glen!!
cheapeto you are very welcome. Ya see our junk 10 page owners manuals are written in Chinese..translated to English. Their 91 octane(by RON measurement only) equals our 87 octane. Only using American grade 91-93 octane premium gas has been argued here MANY times. But if you read the charts in the link..you will see it is not needed. The GY6 50 and 150 engines are NOT high compression racing engines(unless we build them that way)..so true American premium gas is not needed. Sure premium only costs a few cents more per tank full in our tiny 1-1 1/2 gallon tanks. But why use premium high octane to decrease the combustion rate of an already small displacement engine that needs all the help it can get to make power all ready? As for his engine damage..again that is NOT piston melting. In my shop I have seen that very same thing as shown in the pictures. To verify the cause we lined up the timing marks...pushed a piece of wire down the spark hole..and low and behold..the piston was NOT at TDC. The cam chain had jumped several teeth and the timing was WAY off. This of course caused the valve to 'kiss' the piston. The broken off metal parts bounced around in the engine as it continued its rotation while shutting down..and gave the illusion of a melted piston. Any of us that have welded or melted metal know that...when metal melts..it flows smoothly. It does NOT leave sharp edges and pitting. Like water it flows smoothly seeking its own level. Therefore what we see in the pics is mechanical damage and not heat related damage.. But then what do I know..I am a Paramedic..Cardiac Tech and Nurse..not an ASE certified mechanic... No longer in the Medical Field cause after 30 years of that I got burned out. I am also a disabled VET with 21 years service..so I am unable to work in the medical field anymore due to broken body parts and high toxin levels. Sooo...I opened my own Scooter parts/repair shop which has been a fun 9 years so far. But then when ya do something ya like doing..such as a hobby that you get paid to do...you never have to go to work right?
Glenn
  Reply With Quote
Old 08-21-2014, 09:40 AM   #24
seamus26   seamus26 is offline
 
seamus26's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2014
Location: Grand Rapids, MI
Posts: 46
Quote:
Originally Posted by carasdad View Post
cheapeto you are very welcome. Ya see our junk 10 page owners manuals are written in Chinese..translated to English. Their 91 octane(by RON measurement only) equals our 87 octane. Only using American grade 91-93 octane premium gas has been argued here MANY times. But if you read the charts in the link..you will see it is not needed. The GY6 50 and 150 engines are NOT high compression racing engines(unless we build them that way)..so true American premium gas is not needed. Sure premium only costs a few cents more per tank full in our tiny 1-1 1/2 gallon tanks. But why use premium high octane to decrease the combustion rate of an already small displacement engine that needs all the help it can get to make power all ready? As for his engine damage..again that is NOT piston melting. In my shop I have seen that very same thing as shown in the pictures. To verify the cause we lined up the timing marks...pushed a piece of wire down the spark hole..and low and behold..the piston was NOT at TDC. The cam chain had jumped several teeth and the timing was WAY off. This of course caused the valve to 'kiss' the piston. The broken off metal parts bounced around in the engine as it continued its rotation while shutting down..and gave the illusion of a melted piston. Any of us that have welded or melted metal know that...when metal melts..it flows smoothly. It does NOT leave sharp edges and pitting. Like water it flows smoothly seeking its own level. Therefore what we see in the pics is mechanical damage and not heat related damage.. But then what do I know..I am a Paramedic..Cardiac Tech and Nurse..not an ASE certified mechanic... No longer in the Medical Field cause after 30 years of that I got burned out. I am also a disabled VET with 21 years service..so I am unable to work in the medical field anymore due to broken body parts and high toxin levels. Sooo...I opened my own Scooter parts/repair shop which has been a fun 9 years so far. But then when ya do something ya like doing..such as a hobby that you get paid to do...you never have to go to work right?
Glenn
Thank you for your service in many respects. Paramedics, firefighters ... you're all heroes in my book. And a scooter repair tech to boot.

Good post about octane. I've always understood octane to be resistance to ignition. My old Grand Wagoneer used to knock like crazy without premium.

I run a 150cc GY6 and I've been putting premium in it all along. In fact, if you've seen my other posts, I've kind of obsessed about it.

My question, I guess, is if higher octane means less pre-ignition, wouldn't that be a protection for your engine, especially at higher RPMs?
__________________

Hey, look what that idiot said!
  Reply With Quote
Old 08-21-2014, 09:57 AM   #25
carasdad   carasdad is offline
 
carasdad's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: South Haven Michigan
Posts: 225
Quote:
Originally Posted by seamus26 View Post
Thank you for your service in many respects. Paramedics, firefighters ... you're all heroes in my book. And a scooter repair tech to boot.

Good post about octane. I've always understood octane to be resistance to ignition. My old Grand Wagoneer used to knock like crazy without premium.

I run a 150cc GY6 and I've been putting premium in it all along. In fact, if you've seen my other posts, I've kind of obsessed about it.

My question, I guess, is if higher octane means less pre-ignition, wouldn't that be a protection for your engine, especially at higher RPMs?
You are welcome! I would serve 21 more years if I wasn't in such bad health. Kidneys died due to chemicals we were exposed to. But of course the VA does stand behind those of us that were laden with toxins.. In fact they stand behind us... 0%..
In regards to high octane..well if ya don't have pre-ignition I wouldn't see a need for it. But if it works for ya..use it...only costs a few pennies more per tank. In my Scoot it just seems to give less power. I used to own a Turbo Charged PT Cruiser and it HAD to have high octane..otherwise it sounded like VW diesel engine going down the road.. I am not against high octane gas..I just wanted to let folks see and read that when their Asian manual says 91 octane..it is RON which equals 87 in U.S. gas. Cause many freak out or get frustrated when they can't find a gas station with 91 octane(U.S. grade gas)
  Reply With Quote
Old 08-21-2014, 09:58 AM   #26
scootersparts.net   scootersparts.net is offline
 
Join Date: Aug 2014
Posts: 1
Seems like defective valve to us!
  Reply With Quote
Old 08-21-2014, 10:11 AM   #27
carasdad   carasdad is offline
 
carasdad's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: South Haven Michigan
Posts: 225
Quote:
Originally Posted by scootersparts.net View Post
Seems like defective valve to us!
Could be that as well. Valve tip just broke off. I was merely posting what I have seen and not saying it is the definitive problem.. But it is mechanical related and not heat or detonation related. As I am sure you know..molten/melted metal does not create sharp pitted areas such as in the pics..
  Reply With Quote
Old 08-21-2014, 09:34 PM   #28
Maddog   Maddog is offline
 
Maddog's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: Orlando, Fl.
Posts: 75
Classic "dropped valve" syndrome. Check to see If the valve retainer or keeper is still intact. Or is the valve spring broken? Somehow the retainers came loose and allowed the valve to "drop" and strike the piston until it snapped.
  Reply With Quote
Old 08-22-2014, 07:20 AM   #29
cheapeto   cheapeto is offline
 
cheapeto's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: York PA
Posts: 339
Hey Glen, when I first came to SD, like many I lurked for about a year before I registared, and ONE of the big fights going on back then (man I miss all that great info) was gas ratings and octane levels, and ethanol.
I always go do my own research for a thing, and man you nailed it!!
__________________
Ride For Kids.org
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-06-2014, 01:01 PM   #30
kz1000st   kz1000st is offline
 
kz1000st's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Hyde Park, NY
Posts: 1,131
Just so you don't feel bad about this take a gander at what happens to the high priced spread. How would you like to spend that much money and have this happen.

http://modernvespa.com/forum/topic130381.2
__________________
2008 Eagle Milano 150- 9,679 miles
2009 Honda Rebel 250- 10,434 miles
2009 CF Moto Fashion- 16,023 miles
2009 MC-114 50cc Cub Clone- 4,317 miles
twowheeler.yolasite.com/

That's 30,049 China Scootin miles and Counting.
  Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:59 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.