| Kart
Racers Resource |
Piston
Diagnostic Guide
By Eric
Gorr
The process
of examining a used piston can tell a mechanic helpful information
on the condition of an engine. When an engine failure occurs, the
piston is likely to take the brunt of the damage. A careful examination
of the piston can help a mechanic trace the source of a mechanical
or tuning problem. This technical article serves as a guide for
the most common mechanical problems that plague engines.
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PERFECT
BROWN CROWN
The crown
of this piston shows an ideal carbon pattern. The transfer ports
of this two-stroke engine are flowing equally and the color
of the carbon pattern is chocolate brown. That indicates that
this engine's carb is jetted correctly. |
| BLACK
SPOT HOT
The underside
of this piston has a black spot. The black spot is a carbon
deposit that resulted from pre-mix oil burning on to the piston
because the piston's crown was too hot. The main reasons for
this problem are overheating due to too lean carb jetting or
coolant system failure. |
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ASH
TRASH
This piston
crown has an ash color, which shows that the engine has run
hot. The ash color is actually piston material that has started
to flash (melt) and turned to tiny flakes. If this engine was
run any longer, it probably would,ve developed a hot spot and
hole near the exhaust side and failed. The main causes of this
problem are too lean carb jetting, too hot spark plug range,
too far advanced ignition timing, too much compression for the
fuel's octane, or a general overheating problem. |
| SMASHED
DEBRIS
This piston
crown has been damaged because debris entered the combustion
chamber and was crushed between the piston and the cylinder
head. This engine had a corresponding damage pattern on the
head's squish band. The common causes of this problem are broken
needle bearings from the small or big end bearings of the connecting
rod, broken ring ends, or a dislodged ring centering pin. When
A problem like this occurs, its important to locate where the
debris originated. Also the crankcases must be flushed out to
remove any left over debris that could cause the same damage
again. If the debris originated from the big end of the connecting
rod, then the crankshaft should be replaced along with the main
bearings and seals. |
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CHIPPED
CROWN DROWNED
This piston
crown chipped at the top ring groove because of a head gasket
leak. The coolant is drawn into the combustion chamber on the
down-stroke of the piston. When the coolant hits the piston
crown it makes the aluminum brittle and it eventually cracks.
In extreme cases the head gasket leak can cause erosion at the
top edge of the cylinder and the corresponding area of the head.
Minor leaks of the gasket or o-ring appear as black spots across
the gasket surface. An engine that suffers from coolant being
pressurized and forced out of the radiator cap's vent tube,
is a strong indication of a head gasket leak. In most cases
the top of the cylinder and the face of the cylinder head must
be resurfaced when a leak occurs. Most mx bikes have head stays
mounting the head to the frame. Over time the head can become
warped near the head stay mounting tab, because of the forces
transferred through the frame from the top shock mount. It's
important to check for warpage of the head every time you rebuild
the top end. |
| SHATTERED
SKIRT
The skirts
of this piston shattered because the piston to cylinder clearance
was too great. When the piston is allowed to rattle in the cylinder
bore, it develops stress cracks and eventually shatters.
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SNAPPED
ROD
The connecting
rod of this engine snapped in half because the clearance between
the rod and the thrust washers of the big end was too great.
When the big end bearing wears out, the radial deflection of
the rod becomes excessive and the rod suffers from torsion vibration.
This leads to connecting rod breakage and catastrophic engine
damage. The big end clearance should be checked every time you
rebuild the top end. To check the side clearance of the connecting
rod, insert a feeler gauge between the rod and a thrust washer.
Check the maximum wear limits in your engine's factory service
manual. |
| FOUR-CORNER
SEIZURE
This piston
has vertical seizure marks at four equally spaced points around
the circumference. A four-corner seizure is caused when the
piston expands faster than the cylinder and the clearance between
the piston and cylinder is reduced. Another common problem of
this type is a single point seizure on the center of the exhaust
side of the piston. However this occurs only on cylinders with
bridged exhaust ports. The main causes for this problem are
too quick warm-up, too lean carb jetting (main jet), or too
hot of a spark plug range. |
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MULTI-POINT
SEIZURE
This piston
has many vertical seizure marks around the circumference. This
cylinder was bored to a diameter that was too small for the
piston. As soon as the engine started and the piston started
its thermal expansion, the piston pressed up against the cylinder
walls and seized. The optimum piston to cylinder wall clearances
for different types of cylinders vary greatly. For example a
50cc composite plated cylinder can use a piston to cylinder
wall clearance of .0015 inches, whereas a 1200cc steel-sleeved
cylinder snowmobile set-up for grass drags will need between
.0055 to .0075 inches. For the best recommendation on the optimum
piston to cylinder clearance for your engine, look to the specs
that come packaged with the piston or consult your factory service
manual. |
| INTAKE
SIDE SEIZURE
This piston
was seized on the intake side. This is very uncommon and is
caused by only one thing, loss of lubrication. There are three
possible causes for loss of lubrication, no pre-mix oil, separation
of the fuel and pre-mix oil in the fuel tank, water passed through
the air-filter and washed the oil film off the piston skirt.
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COMPOSITE
FLAKING
Most two-stroke
cylinders used on motorcycles and snowmobiles, have composite
plated cylinders. The composite material is made of tiny silicon
carbide particles. The electro-plating process enables the silicon
carbide particles to bond to the cylinder wall. The particles
are very hard and sharp, they don't bond to the ports so the
manufacturer or reconditioning specialist must thoroughly clean
the cylinder. Sometimes the silicon carbide "flashing"
breaks loose from the ports and becomes wedged between the cylinder
and the piston. This causes tiny vertical scratches in the piston.
This problem isn't necessarily dangerous and doesn't cause catastrophic
piston failure, but it should be addressed by thoroughly flushing
the cylinder and ball-honing the bore to redefine the cross-hatching
marks. Normally you will need to replace the piston kit because
the scratches will reduce the piston's diameter beyond the wear
spec. |
| BURNT-OUT
BLOW-HOLE
This piston
was overheated so badly that a hole melted through the crown
and collapsed the ring grooves on the exhaust side. Normally
the piston temperature is higher on the exhaust side so catastrophic
problems will appear there first. There are several reasons
for a failure like this, here are the most common; air-leak
at the magneto side crankshaft seal, too lean carb jetting,
too far advanced ignition timing or faulty igniter box, too
hot of a spark plug range, too high of a compression ratio,
too low octane fuel. |
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BLOW-BY
This piston
didn't fail in operation but it does show the most common problem,
blow-by. The rings were worn past the maximum ring end gap spec,
allowing combustion pressure to seep past the rings and down
the piston skirt causing a distinct carbon pattern. Its possible
that the cylinder walls cross-hatched honing pattern is partly
to blame. If the cylinder walls are glazed or worn too far,
even new rings won't seal properly to prevent a blow-by problem.
Flex-Hones is a product available at most auto parts stores.
They can be used to remove oil glazing and restore cross-hatch
honing marks that enable the rings to wear to the cylinder and
form a good seal. If you purchase a Flex-Hone for your cylinder,
the proper grit is 240 and the size should be 10% smaller than
the bore diameter. |
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