by Puffs » Thu Mar 15, 2018 8:53 am
Well, I don't actually know what the term "squish band" means in English. Previously I figured it was something like Plastigauge as Japan Inc. use, or a piece of solder, you put for instance between the piston & head (through the plug hole) to measure the gap between those, but now I guess not.
But I do think the ignition timing values you mention are very late.
Yes I suspect it is due to too high pressure, which makes the engine kick-back when you start it. And then it happily runs backwards, as two-strokes do (if the ignition allows that).
I don't know, just shooting from the hip. Did you use the original 250 head? The volume of the combustion chamber in that is likely smaller than for the 300 head, so you're compressing a bigger volume (bore increased) into the same (or at least very similar) volume when the piston is at TDC. Hence the pressure is higher.
You could measure the compression pressure, but I do not know what value you should get for such a bike. You can also just take off the head & put some more gasket below it, if you have those. That will increase the volume left @ TDC: You can estimate the thickness as follows:
Haynes specify a 10.5:1 compression ratio for both the 250 & 300.
The 250 is 243cc, so the volume of the combustion chamber is 23.14cc.
The 300 is 287cc, so the volume of the combustion chamber is 27.33cc, so you need 4.2cc more. At a bore of 76mm that is about 1mm. So you need about 1mm more gasket than before. If you leave it as-is, you'll have a compression ratio of about 12.4:1
Fyi, Haynes also specify 0.035mm / 0.0013in piston-to-bore clearance for the 300 (and, surprisingly, 0.04mm / 0.0015in for the 250/251). Yet 0.06-0.07mm would do me fine.
Last edited by
Puffs on Mon Jan 06, 2025 6:51 am, edited 2 times in total.