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Sean
Firing on two.
Joined: April 22nd, 2009, 11:06 pm Posts: 3684 Location: Ecosse
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 Re: Pinking on 2nd Choke
Jameswallace wrote: ive always felt it difficult to know what pinking sounds like personally. russ said it sounds like walking on rice crispies, however in a cab noisy engine, i cant hear myself think,,,,, cant seem to find a video on tubeyou to help  sounds like a buzzy tinking noise from the front, Ken used to have a good link on u-tube found iti spent the other year trying to stop pinking on my car and guess what it was? the door trim the metal springs had lost their tension and the ally strip on the passenger door buzzing with the revs sounded just like it 
_________________ Kissing the Lash
 "Any advice of a technical nature is given on the understanding that I've actually done this shit, not just read about it in D*lly club mag some time ago.
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November 20th, 2010, 11:10 pm |
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J-dub
Aircooled Idiot
Joined: April 24th, 2010, 10:01 am Posts: 5733 Location: Location Location
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 Re: Pinking on 2nd Choke
thats what i was after thanks sounds a bit like rice crispies being walked on, but you know when you cant quite put your finger on it, and you need showing...
it also sounds like synthasised rain!!
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1988 2cv 652cc 1993 Toyota Hilux Surf 3000cc runs on Bio Diesel 2004 Toyota Landcruiser Amazon 4200cc runs on Bio Diesel 1998 Daihatsu Hijet 1300cc 2005 Susuki Bandit 650cc
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November 20th, 2010, 11:13 pm |
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Sean
Firing on two.
Joined: April 22nd, 2009, 11:06 pm Posts: 3684 Location: Ecosse
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 Re: Pinking on 2nd Choke
and if you get it wrong!  and the head 
_________________ Kissing the Lash
 "Any advice of a technical nature is given on the understanding that I've actually done this shit, not just read about it in D*lly club mag some time ago.
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November 21st, 2010, 12:03 am |
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J-dub
Aircooled Idiot
Joined: April 24th, 2010, 10:01 am Posts: 5733 Location: Location Location
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 Re: Pinking on 2nd Choke
christ on a bicycle, maybe i should take matt damper for a spin in my car, i take him to the pompey puddle ducks every month, and he didnt say anything about pinking last time on our journey back, there is a small sort of, crunchy sound about 25 but i think thats being in the wrong gear at the wrong time (seems to be in certain gear) and trying to accelrate to hard, so im probably panicking now so ill shup 
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1988 2cv 652cc 1993 Toyota Hilux Surf 3000cc runs on Bio Diesel 2004 Toyota Landcruiser Amazon 4200cc runs on Bio Diesel 1998 Daihatsu Hijet 1300cc 2005 Susuki Bandit 650cc
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November 21st, 2010, 12:16 am |
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2CViking
viking bastard
Joined: April 18th, 2009, 11:43 am Posts: 2424 Location: Meneac, Bretagne France
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 Re: Pinking on 2nd Choke
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November 21st, 2010, 12:39 am |
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J-dub
Aircooled Idiot
Joined: April 24th, 2010, 10:01 am Posts: 5733 Location: Location Location
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 Re: Pinking on 2nd Choke
that must of been a few psi down on compression viking
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1988 2cv 652cc 1993 Toyota Hilux Surf 3000cc runs on Bio Diesel 2004 Toyota Landcruiser Amazon 4200cc runs on Bio Diesel 1998 Daihatsu Hijet 1300cc 2005 Susuki Bandit 650cc
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November 21st, 2010, 1:05 am |
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Nelsthebass
Firing on two.
Joined: October 5th, 2009, 8:22 pm Posts: 1415 Location: Stone, Staffs
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 Re: Pinking on 2nd Choke
Pinking sounds like glass tinkling...tink tink tink
_________________ 1987 2CV Special 2014 Suzuki Swift Sport 2015 Lexus NX300h 1966 Ami Break
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November 21st, 2010, 2:13 am |
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Joolz
Firing on two.
Joined: January 5th, 2009, 5:48 am Posts: 1687 Location: Haven't a clue
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 Re: Pinking on 2nd Choke
I have a confession, I still don't understand all this pinking stuff. Basically it's when the mixture is igniting earlier than it should, right? Ok, so one cause can be that the ignition timing is too far advanced, obvious, straightforward, makes perfect sense. Retard the timing, problem cured. Another cause is fuel with too low an octane rating, am I right? Now the octane rating is a fuel's resistance to compression ignition, so the problem is being caused by the fuel igniting as a result of being compressed, before the plug fires. And yet people recommend retarding the ignition timing as a cure. Another cause is too high a compression ratio, now it makes sense to me that a high compression engine will need a higher octane fuel, but then I read things like this; Quote: Detonation exists when the combustion pressure is raised so high that the inlet charge ignites itself before the spark plug fires. When this happens, combustion takes place while the piston is still travelling up in the cylinder bore, which puts tremendous loads on the piston, rod, and crank. ...a boost timing retard chip that retards the engine's ignition timing under certain conditions to prevent detonation. Surely it's not just me that sees a breakdown in logic there? And as Ken said on the previous page, pinking occurs on full throttle because when the throttle is partially closed less mixture enters the cylinders, and therefore pressures are lower. Which again suggests to me that compression ignition is the cause. But I can't see how the three things he suggests could have the same effect. Retarding the ignition: suggests the plug is simply sparking too early. Re-jetting: perhaps a lean mixture is more prone to compression ignition? Using a cooler plug: suggests that an overheating plug is triggering ignition without sparking. I did read somewhere that pinking, detonation, and knocking are not the same things, is what's happening here that all these problems are being lumped together as pinking, and the different solutions are actually curing different things? This just isn't logical in my head. What am I missing? I'm not saying what anyone else has written isn't true, just that I don't understand it. I don't understand, I don't understand, I don't understand. 
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November 21st, 2010, 3:00 am |
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ken
Agony Aunt - You have a car problem? Speak to Ken
Joined: March 6th, 2009, 1:40 am Posts: 3675
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 Re: Pinking on 2nd Choke
Joolz, perhaps the first thing you may need to clarify in your mind is the basic difference between a 'spark ignition' engine and one which is 'compression ignition' ? The second thing would be to realise that the internet is flooded with advice, some of it 'informed' and some of it 'not quite so well informed'. In the case of this particular quote, which seems to be causing you considerable confusion, it seems to me that the clown who drafted it hadn't got any idea what he was talking about. Either that, or he was talking out of the wrong end of his body... ken Joolz wrote: Another cause is too high a compression ratio, now it makes sense to me that a high compression engine will need a higher octane fuel, but then I read things like this; Quote: Detonation exists when the combustion pressure is raised so high that the inlet charge ignites itself before the spark plug fires. When this happens, combustion takes place while the piston is still travelling up in the cylinder bore, which puts tremendous loads on the piston, rod, and crank. ...a boost timing retard chip that retards the engine's ignition timing under certain conditions to prevent detonation.
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November 21st, 2010, 3:32 am |
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Sean
Firing on two.
Joined: April 22nd, 2009, 11:06 pm Posts: 3684 Location: Ecosse
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 Re: Pinking on 2nd Choke
Pinking or knock occurs when the ignited charge rather than burning evenly releasing the energy in a controlled manner, it goes off and self combusts like you try to chieve in a diesel!
As can be seen from the pictures there is localised heat dammage opposite the spark plug, (Vikings piston is upside down from its fitted position)
The plug fires and the flame front moves accross the chamber the pressure in the chamber rises and if conditions arent right the unburnt charge at the other side spontaneously combusts in an explosive way, it occurs at one of the squish points in our engines.
It causes excess heat and it breaks down the barrier layer of gas that stops the burning petrol from melting the aluminium.
it cuses a shock to the engine which is what we hear.
the common problem seen on our engines is that the local heating and the aircooled engine means the oil film breaks down and so the piston is dammaged as can be seen by the smear of alloy on the piston skirt, as well as the shock having distorted the land between the compression rings, this nips the rings and compression is lost....often referred to as "partial seizure"
good petrol should burn in a controlled and even manner, modern petrols have many additives to achieve this as well as others that are there to make it "cleaner and greener and its these that seem to be causing the older M28 engine problems as it burns hotter and faster to suit the modern engine
Sean
_________________ Kissing the Lash
 "Any advice of a technical nature is given on the understanding that I've actually done this shit, not just read about it in D*lly club mag some time ago.
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November 21st, 2010, 1:09 pm |
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