Well presumably he went lean as he ran low on gas and then switched to reserve. I've done that countless times though and never holed a piston. Interesting mystery. Maybe tried to keep the speed up with lots of throttle for a few seconds before flipping the valve?The last time that happened to me was on my '69 Triumph 650 Tiger. It had a single carb and was told it was a more common failure on the dual carb Bonneville's with one carb going lean.
The failure happened at highway speeds. Mechanic could not figure out what caused it but back in those days we had to rebuild the engines every 2yrs so didn't think much of it but with today's bikes, I would certainly question things the way you are doing.
My guess is timing is set too far advanced - check timing and make sure the woodruff key is still in the flywheel. Could also be the wrong sparkplug,running lean
I thought a sooty piston was a sign of a little too rich and his clean piston was a sign of running lean.Lean condition also leaves a lot of coal on the piston, the whole top would be black with carbon, your piston top view doesn't suggest lean caused that hole..
Are you sure this was related to reserve? You may have been running lean for a long time and the power loss that caused you to think reserve was required may have been the start of the hole.When I pulled the plugs there was not much left of the centre electrode. I threw them out and bought new ones specified by the manufacturer, I think the new ones are one heat range cooler
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Looks OK to me. I would be tearing down carbs prior to running it again. Figure out what is different about the bad cylinder.
This is the other piston
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Don't you think this would create damage at the edges rather than the center of the piston? Typically lean leads to piston swelling and seizure.Blown head gasket would lead to steam cleaning ... and coolant temp isn't a good indicator of piston temp. Did you know the head gasket was leaking before this happened? The usual symptom (been there, done that) is that it pumps coolant out into the overflow tank and won't draw it back in.
I revise my hypothetical sequence of events. Leaking head gasket allowed coolant level to drop too low, leading to local overheating in the cylinder head, which when combined with the lean condition from running out of fuel, cooked the piston.
I like wideband gauges. Be careful with the results. As your bike has two entirely separate mixtures, rich on one cylinder and lean on the other could look ok on the gauge. With one carb feeding an engine, there will be some variation but you can't have the huge difference between cylinders that you can get on a bike. Now, if you put the sensor in the header before the merge you could get performance of a specific cylinder. Welding a bung into a shiny header will look like poo. I don't know of wideband gauges that do multiple simultaneous channels.I just wanted to thank everyone for their input. Just so I understand, it was most likely a prolonged lean condition? I will check that everything is right when I get it back together. Maybe get a wide band O2 sensor and a way to read it
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