Try our new info resource - "Aladdin's Cave" (Main menu)Just added a separate link to Ash's Dropbox thread (shortcut)
.... "somehow" spun the motor over and snapped off rear piston skirt, carried on like this and unsurprisingly it wouldn't run! How hard can it be?
Sometimes people just make it difficult too.Went to visit my sister, niece's boyfriend was there and extremely worried about his scooter. He'd bought a "performance" expansion chamber exhaust, delivered there to avoid his father's gaze. This just the beginning of his problems, how hard can it be to swap? Anyway, taken out the big bolt support at end, exhaust system dropped and snapped off half the exhaust port flange of cast iron barrel. Undeterred (a week previously) and ridden it with the big bolt back in but very noisy, ordered a new barrel and piston kit. How hard can it be to swap it?Taken top of motor apart, but with the new piston on the rod and hanging out of the crankcase, "somehow" spun the motor over and snapped off rear piston skirt, carried on like this and unsurprisingly it wouldn't run! How hard can it be?Top off again, installed old piston in new barrel, started it and sounded funny, then stopped. Took top off again (which is when I'd arrived on scene. He'd fitted piston BACKWARDS , ring location pins had rattled up and down exhaust port, rings partly broken and ring lands mushed. How hard can it be?Oh, and it had half a base gasket on it. The other half still on the old barrel. How hard can it be?Soooooo, I got the piston lands back in shape by grinding a wood chisel on a bench grinder to "plane" the mushed material out of them ( BiL has bench grinder and chisels left in garage from previous owner, he doesn't know how to use them), fitted the new rings to the old piston, glued the base gasket back together in situ with what's left of an old gooey tube of blue Hylomar that seems to have been in my tool bag forever, anealed the copper head gasket with gas ring in kitchen, then reassembled. And THEY, were surprised that it started and was going. What really amuses me is that the lad was an apprentice...............domestic gas fitter how hard can it be?
[quote Cheered me up in my COVID isolation that did! You can't teach common sense - in a previous job, I was a careers adviser and the number of people I saw who had degrees but no common sense was amazing
Quote from: philward on November 13, 2020, 10:23:37 PM[quote Cheered me up in my COVID isolation that did! You can't teach common sense - in a previous job, I was a careers adviser and the number of people I saw who had degrees but no common sense was amazingIt's debatable if there is such a thing as common sense at least when I was in training its what we came to accept. We redefined it as a group identity by way of shared life experiences. Certainly it was my experience that graduates who had never worked until they left university were at a disadvantage in terms of real life experiences. Likewise when I was a Univetsity students who had come from Secondary Schools like myself were quite different from those from public schools who were relatively immature in terms of life experiences.
First day at college doing my apprenticeship new teacher walks in.‘Hello, I’m Mister Eatwell, I’ll just write that on the board for you’He went to the board and wrote ‘BASTARD’Turned out he was a really nice bloke.