In our competition bikes we used:
NGK BP6ES Spark plugs (the genuine Japanese made NGK's)
Castrol R two stroke oil
NEVER leaner than 30:1 in cold weather and 25:1 in warm weather. This is critical for these bike. Many motors were destroyed by running leaner than 30:1!
In South Africa we only used 97 octane pump fuel and never had ethanol blends. In Africa they use corn to feed the hungry.
This bike had a 7 in it and it was kind of black...
I spent yesterday afternoon tearing the bike down a little...
removed the tank...there was no petcock.
I pulled the plug and sprayed a little weasel piss in the hole and gently rocked the bike...
nothing.
I decided to not pull the motor yet, so I pulled the head.
I've had a lot of 2 smokers apart, and the inside of this thing didn't look anything like a bike that stuck while it was running.
The bore was glazed, but had no scoring at all and not rusty...yet the piston was stuck solid.
So I pulled the air filter...an aftermarket Unifilter which crumbled in my hands...and behold the mung in the bellmouth. It was definitely dried up fuel and oil mix. I figure the lack of a petcock and the basic properties of the Amal carb allowed the contents of the tank into the crankcase.
So I proceeded to heat the cylinder with a heat gun and kept the bore full of penetrating oil and used a bar to pry up on the cylinder...gently...it budged...so I kept prying and tapping and heating...and finally got the cylinder off.
The top ring was pretty much free in it's groove, but the bottom ring was stuck. A little penetrating oil and some working it with my fingers and I got it out.
The small end bearing was stuck. The piston wouldn't pivot on it's pin. The connecting rod was the same way at the big end, and the crank wouldn't turn.
So...I filled the cases with Dexron and started spraying penetrating oil on the small end needles.
I started examining the bottom of the cylinder and the liner and it was caked with dried up fuel and oil. A little Dexron and scrape with a paint stick and it came right off.
I also pulled the left case cover so I could access the flywheel nut to turn the crank.
To make a long story short...the bottom end is completely freed up, I got the piston off, and I think I managed to capture all the loose needle bearings...I'll install them in the rod and make sure. If not a caged needle is available. I ran a hone through the bore and cleaned up the majority of the glazing and the mung ridges from the rings.
I'll disassemble the carb and take it to my buddies shop and put it in his ultrasonic cleaner along with the piston.
I'll measure things up and as long as clearances are within reason I'll bolt it back together and check for spark, adjust things as necessary, and see if it runs using a remote fuel tank. I'm not looking to make this a new bike.
If I get it going I'll continue with the project. If it doesn't run I'll have decisions to make.
I'm thinking it will run.