Eric,
I'd have to try and find the paperwork but if I recall correctly headhog used Rowe valves when he restored my heads.
That got ya revving did it Bob?
Mike, that was my first thought when I saw the photo.
Cotten,
Does this make it easier?
Eric,
I'd have to try and find the paperwork but if I recall correctly headhog used Rowe valves when he restored my heads.
That got ya revving did it Bob?
Mike, that was my first thought when I saw the photo.
Cotten,
Does this make it easier?
Cory Othen
Membership#10953
Thanks Cory,
Now I can see them all on a modern PC,
but it takes forty to seventy seconds to open something, and right now the "reply with quote" has been continuous spinning for about twelve minutes, even though I clicked "reply" after a minute, and the window popped up immediately.
And then "submit" didn't work, so I went "advanced".
This site has more bugs than a stray cat.
Back to topic,
Its a two-piece valve, Folks.
Except for Kibblewhite, I cannot think of any that are not.
Rowe is defunct, by the way.
The valve is a victim, like the piston.
The question is where the fuse was lit.
(The example in my photo was stamped "ENGLAND", and I installed it new. It had a fuse that I consider admirable.)
The other valve should be inspected for knicks at its margin from a collision, and both guide-to-stem clearances inspected.
Photos are tricky, but the valve looks pretty white, and there seems to be a shadow at the top of the first pic that suggests the head has warped a skosh.
These are excessive heat signatures.
Excessive heat makes things come-from-together, one way or another; I smell a vacuum leak.
.....Cotten
AMCA #776
Dumpster Diver's Motto: Seek,... and Ye Shall Find!
now i know to some this is not a big deal,but if that was my bike like that,the ole arse woulda puckered so tight,that if i farted only dogs would hear it!
joe i send you outmost my sincere condolences to valve and piston.........and other than a pan down,i hope all is good with you!,,,all the best to you joe.
running too low octane gas causes flash burns creating heat.the valve stem swells, sticking in the guide.the cam goes away and the valve slams shut[pinging]the valve face tries to weld to the seat both from the heat and slamming closed,and the cam breaks the valve trying to free it from the seat. Or intake leak like Cotton says
Or the sticking valve gets clipped by the other valve, which calls for inspection of the stem-to-guide clearances:
A valve can stick in a wallowed guide just like a tight one.
....Cotten
PS: Gary H! I can recount the experience of my photo's example explicitly.
My sphincter was not involved.
AMCA #776
Dumpster Diver's Motto: Seek,... and Ye Shall Find!
Jerry, All theses engines burn a little oil , they have no valve seals. Carb. is tuned well plug and pipes look good. And yes Rowe is or has closed their doors, retiring.
Cotton, I have looked all the parts over and with the perfectly clean fracture it would appear the valve is at fault. There is no other damage other than the seat impression and loose exhaust valve guide bore.
mcarver The valve springs, retainer and keepers look fine.
Cotton, The valve guide for the broken exhaust valve is loose and I could pass a .395" gauge pin through the .375 nominal hole size. On the other hand the intake valve guide was a close fit smooth operating and well oiled without nicks or dings in the valve margin or seat area. The intake seat was large and the valve seat surface on the valve itself was slightly unusual. I don't suspect any foul play with anything other than the exhaust valve breaking possibly aggravated by the unusually loose guide bore.
I to am aware of the English sabotaging our Panheads with those faulty valves. I have seen and heard of several of them breaking.
As far as a vacuum leak , that was way in its past and resolved. This motor would idle at an extremely low RPM and run smoothly through its normal rev range. Vacuum leaks tests have been conducted since the leak repair and non found.
Gary, This is a big deal to me. Yes it is repairable in my shop by me but time is a problem I have several projects in operation right now and more lined up so I don't know when I will find time to repair this motor (entire rebuild with hydraulic conversion for the lifters). This bike is my regular rider and it will be down for the rest of the year. Right now the Barber bike (1912 belt drive twin) and the Cannonball bike (1914 twin) are consuming all my time.
Duffey, These old low compression motors run fine on the same gas I put in my Town Car, (most anything). I have near 300,000 miles on the T.C. and it runs fine.
What we have is a very loose guide on an exhaust valve and nothing else is suspect as far as I can see. There isn't any galling on the stem so perhaps the valve wobbling around fatigues the valve stem. The break as clean as it is tells me other wise though.
joe
Joe,
Remember to check how the rocker arm makes contact with the top of the valve, if not correct it will wear out a new guide quickly. The arm may need redressed to make full contact throughout the opening of the valve. Bob
Bob
I have not checked the strike point of the rocker to valve, my time is spent on other projects and unfortunately the 48 has taken a back seat. What I have checked is the rocker travel and feel. Both rockers have like new action and appear not to be a problem. I still maintained the valve is a faulty part even though the guide was so badly worn.
joe
As Cotten said, the valve is the victim, not the perpetrator. A very loose guide allows the rocker to push the stem out of alignment, causing the valve to contact the seat on one edge first when closing, every time, then slamming straight at the end of it travel, with the stem flexing a tiny bit every time- might as well hold the valve and hit it on edge with a hammer- sooner or later it's gonna break at the weld. Same thing that happens when a valve makes contact and gets slightly bent, it'll pound on that one edge until it fatigues from the flexing and the head comes off. Nothing wrong with that valve except it's been abused for a long time by a very sloppy guide- and that guide could have been sloppy since day one. The very wide contact pattern on the valve (all the way across, edge to edge, and wider than the width of the seat in the head) also shows that it was hitting on edge and then funneling in straight. Same problem occurs with hollow-stem, sodium-filled exhaust valves- they work very well unless the guides get sloppy, then they get pounded and fatigue, and the heads start coming off
The confusing aspect, why is the intake valve guide so perfect and the exhaust valve guide so loose? I know the exhaust is under sever conditions when comparing the two yet I haven't seen a guide this loose. Also I don't know how many miles are on this motor, it was rebuilt prior to my ownership.
MeanGene "then slamming straight at the end of it travel"
Cam profiles prohibit the slamming of valves when closing, if the valve is wobbling in the guide it will hit improperly.
joe