When my 1986 HONDA SPREE is ridden uphill, it just slows and dies. I called my mechanic, and he suggested replacing the spark plug first, and going from there. I have put 2200 miles on it, and it has about 2500 miles. He also said I may have to rebuild the top end?:?
Yikes. Is this the only option for me?
They have cleaned the carborator recently. I am super frustrated.
It will die going uphill if it runs too lean, check to make sure your air filter lid is on tight, and the air screw is seated correctly (1 7/8ths out). Check all the air passages, and check to make sure you even have the filter element 8O (never know unless ya look). Hope this helps ya man!
Do yourself a favor and get a compression check. Is this something that it just started doing or what? What incline is the hill? Are you over 200 lbs?
Compression = power. Under 90 and it gets questionable. HOWEVER these are little 49cc bikes. They are NOT going to pull anything up a dirt hill (even themselves). They weren't made for San Fransisco hills either.
If you're talking a moderate hill on a paved road and you weigh less than 200 lbs my guess is the rings are gone.
Incidentally, the 'top end' means jug/piston/rings. The 'bottom end' is crankshaft/bearings etc.
<<Do yourself a favor and get a compression check. Is this something that it just started doing or what? What incline is the hill? Are you over 200 lbs?>>
I am only 134. The hills are hills I've always done easily, but just in the last 3 days it won't make them.
<<Compression = power. Under 90 and it gets questionable. HOWEVER these are little 49cc bikes. They are NOT going to pull anything up a dirt hill (even themselves). They weren't made for San Fransisco hills either.
If you're talking a moderate hill on a paved road and you weigh less than 200 lbs my guess is the rings are gone.>>
This sounds most logical to me.
<<Incidentally, the 'top end' means jug/piston/rings. The 'bottom end' is crankshaft/bearings etc.
Do yourself a favor and find someone with a compression tester and check the compression yourself b/f you haul it into the repair shop for a ring job. It's a quick test that should clear things up for you.
noiseguy wrote:Do yourself a favor and find someone with a compression tester and check the compression yourself b/f you haul it into the repair shop for a ring job. It's a quick test that should clear things up for you.