Guess why this TS760 piston melted?

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KostasVolos

KostasVolos

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The piston crown started to melt directly underneath the spark plug .The spark plug was unable to transfer it's own thermal load to the cylinder .Because the cylinder was unable to be cooled efficiently .
Cylinder fins packed with solidified oil ,sawdust and wood chips.
This caused extreme heat build up and lead to detonation and
lubrication breakdown .

Either that ,or the engine was over-revved and not for just a short while .
 
av8or3

av8or3

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Plug of the wrong heat range. I once bought a Yamaha RD350 and holed both pistons on the ride home. The original owner had just replaced the plugs with lawnmower plugs or something thinking he was doing me a favor.
Here’s what it looks like when the fuel injector get clogged and temps start to rise in the combustion chamber on an aircraft engine. The piston is 3/4” thick at its crown. IMG_3204.jpeg
The RD350 pistons looked just like the one above. But got that way from a different reason. Mechanic at the time said it was the wrong heat range plug caused it to melt the piston. Little silver balls everywhere.
 
alexcagle

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The piston crown started to melt directly underneath the spark plug .The spark plug was unable to transfer it's own thermal load to the cylinder .Because the cylinder was unable to be cooled efficiently .
Cylinder fins packed with solidified oil ,sawdust and wood chips.
This caused extreme heat build up and lead to detonation and
lubrication breakdown .

Either that ,or the engine was over-revved and not for just a short while .
20151028_014847.jpg
Like this? Lol
 
Lawless
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I had a neighbor years ago that cooked a new Wild Thing after a hurricane in a couple of days from over-revving it due to a dull chain. He moved back to New Yawk a while later. I do not miss the suburbs.

So the consensus is heat in this case?
 
cscltd

cscltd

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I’m sure the rod is a nice shade of blue probably on small and big end.
plus not that it matters, it’s a ts700 or 800, not a ts760 as title states.
 
av8or3

av8or3

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You know , after looking over the pics again, and seeing how the whole piston was cooked leads me to believe that it was just overheated, saw probably looked a lot like the one in the pic above. The piston crown appears to have gotten soft just below the plug, but I don’t think plug heat range had anything to do with it.
 
Lightning Performance

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It could have been many things. Water ladden fuel will do the same thing if you take out enough of the light ends. Pistons with pitting are usually subjected to detonation or even just too much water entering the combustion area under a severe lean condition. Three seconds or less is about all you get on a drag strip with a 3500lb car running a V8. Usually by the time you hear "jinglebells" the piston has already dropped or outright failed. When the flames come out of your valve cover breathers or blow the valve covers off it's a good bet that sparkys got too hot. Where does thing all the heat go in the saw that passes the piston? Yup, right back in the case.
Boats will score a hole in a piston just from too much load on launch trying to get up on plane. That is normally a serverly advanced ignition lead time and poor fuel quality. Two stroke outboards are more prone to it but with modern igntion retard electronics and knock sensors it gets covered up most times. Pre-ignition from carbon deposits causes the depression once the piston starts approaching its melting point. When the flame fronts collide the weak point fails from shock waves across the piston dome. Sometimes they crack at the pin wall or the skirt interface area. Nothing good ever happens after that. Sometimes I find tiny holes around the quench area with material just gone. Apparently aluminum is a good fuel when heated enough.
 

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