I think my Humpy may have sticking exhaust valves.
I Googled "un-sticking valves" and emerged in the world of light aircraft engines. I didn't know that you could (legally) work on your own aircraft engine. Turns out that using various special tools, you can release the valve spring collets and remove the valve spring. Then, having removed the exhaust manifold and working through the exhaust port, you push the valve through into the cylinder, being careful to grab onto the valve stem with a grippy tool so you don't lose the valve inside the cylinder. After that, it's a relatively straightforward operation to send a greased reamer down the exhaust valve guide to clean it up. Starting the exhaust valve back into the guide takes some dexterity, and then when that's done, you reassemble the engine and take the aircraft for a test flight.
Yeesh. But I got to thinking. You can remove the valve springs from red motors using Tool 6A38, which is basically a big, bent fork. Can this technique be adapted to grey motors? I imagine you'd remove the adjuster stud and nut from the rocker, slide the rocker along the shaft, remove the pushrod and then engage the magic tool, while pressurising the cylinder with air. The magic tool would be in the form of a cranked lever with a two-pronged or ring-shaped end . . . wait a minute . . . that sounds very much like a ring spanner. To test the concept, I need
- Assembly, cylinder head, 1
- Shaft, valve rocker, 1
- Pedestal, rocker shaft, 2
- 5/16" UNC bolts, various
- spanner, ring, cheap crappy, 3/4" - 7/8", 1
An old el-cheapo 19 mm ring spanner very nearly fitted. I needed to grind away some of the webbing to make it sit close to centre over the valve spring cap, and then "enthinnen" the end of the ring so the valve spring cap isn't crooked when the valve spring's compressed.
Here's the spanner in place. It's not too hard to remove the collets with long-nose pliers. Getting the valve stem oil seal out was more of a challenge, but my Humpy pre-dates valve stem oil seals.
Valve spring and cap removed.
Next: slip a length of PVC tube over the valve guide and fill it with kerosene or Redex or similar.
My hunch is that there's gunk adhering to the valve stem, which jams into the end of the valve guide when the valve's shut and prevents the valve from seating properly. I believe the test for this is to rotate the valve stem when the valve's closed. It should spin freely. I'm hoping that a couple of days of solvent running down the valve stem should soften the gunk up enough that I can free the valve with a drill.
The back-up plan, of course, is to pull the head off, decoke and grind the valves, along with checking the exhaust valve stem-to-guide clearances. That risks turning into a rebore though.
(Thanks to Brett for the donor cylinder head)
Rob