scotch wrote: Has anyone used compressed air to charge the cylinder and thus keep the valves in place while the seals are being replaced? I've never used this method myself but I understand it's a viable option which would alleviate the need to suffer the anguish of head-gasket issues !
Worse case scenario: a valve does drop and the head has to come off regardless.
Bent rod ? How did this happen ?
Biggest reason this won't work is due to head geometry. Valve adjustment on these bikes is with a shim-over-bucket system. The bucket needs something to ride in, which means that the top of the valve spring is flush with the top of the head assembly. There's no way to compress the spring to get the keepers out (and by extension, get the springs out of the way to get at the valve seals) without having access to both sides of the valve.
Now, Goldwings (the 4 cylinder models, at least) run rocker arm camshafts- only one camshaft per cylinder that runs both the intake and exhaust valves. It would be a single overhead cam, were it not for the funky boxer arrangement. In any case, most of the valve spring is exposed. A lot of guys will run a length of rope into the cylinder via the spark plug hole to keep the valve from dropping, clamp on one of the external valve spring compressors, then remove the valve spring(s) and valve seals like that, without ever having to remove the head.
As for
my bent rod? Tough to say. It was the No. 3 piston, and if I had to guess, I would say the PO left it on the side stand and the middle carburetor got stuck open. Fuel filled cylinder number 3 (either because it was downhill or because it was the only one with an open valve), and the next time he tried to start it, he hydrolocked it. Whatever the reason, all it means is a long winter project for me....