panchothedog
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Yes, that's too upright. It needs to lean a lot more.
Did you try to adjust it first? The nut and bolt holding the kickstand on, thats not supposed to be tight. Its supposed to be loose with a spring holding tension, allowing the kickstand to pivot slightly.I bent the kickstand and it now stands on its own. Thoughts? Leave it as-is or bent a little more? I feel like it might need a little more.
I don't see anyway to adjust how far out it extends. I removed the spring and bolt to heat / bend it. Even with the bolt fairly loose, there's not enough play for it extend outward very much. Maybe I'm missing something?Did you try to adjust it first? The nut and bolt holding the kickstand on, thats not supposed to be tight. Its supposed to be loose with a spring holding tension, allowing the kickstand to pivot slightly.
I can get a picture of the entire mechanism later so you can compare.
Since you have some welding to do anyway, you might think about using a cutoff wheel to groove the weld holding the bracket on, adjust it and weld it where you want it. I have cut them off and moved them toward the rear because they caught on the roots in the woods when they are so far forward.
And it's completely overgrown, so I won't be doing any trail riding.
Judging by how it shot out of the engine I'm SUPER lucky. It must've hit the bottom of the fuel tank. And the fuel tank was full (I had just topped it off before the final ride because I thought the issue was it being out of fuel). Had it pierced the fuel tank I probably wouldn't be posting this right now.
So I cant tell if your kickstand also has the inside tab but that shouldnt matter.
You see how the outside tab on the kickstand is curved. You need a nut and bolt long enough to allow for the pivot.
I assume you have the same kickstand so maybe those tabs got closed up somehow. Maybe theyre clamping onto the mount.
Actually, I wonder if someone over tightened that and clamed those tabs together.
Hope something here helps.
EDIT: If you switch back and forth between two pictures, youll see the pivot action that is supposed to be there.

I wondered what the underside of the fuel tank looked like. You said it wasn’t punctured so I guess we don't need to see it.
Technically speaking, you were at reduced risk (I think?) because high speed failure of a thing that’s rotating on an eccentric (con rod and crank) is safer than a flywheel failure. Flywheels have injured many and killed a few but they were spinning vastly over the original design limits (close to 10K). Anyway, something spinning fast that's made of heavy iron/cast steel and decides to frag on you, well count me out.
When the con-rod seizes on the crank, it snaps in half or several pieces but the crankshaft keeps going, a courtesy of that heavy flywheel. The remains of the connecting rod, no longer contained in its up/down path in the cylinder, can now lean over on the crank and punch a hole in the side of the block. It’s either that or pieces of the con rod and governor get trapped between the crank and the block and there’s nowhere to go but out. It's minor in comparison to the flywheel.
Photos of the oil to check for that lovely metallic sheen would have been nice, if there was any. It tends to settle so there might be some metallic sludge on the bottom of the block. And even then, a little bit is normal when it's in the break-in oil.
Sorry, this thread is like a good movie -- you want to watch it 10x...
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I'm on the fence about just installing a factory carb and being done with it.
The new bike has those newfangled high speed forks. That’s how you know it was fast. Fella had to hit something to help him stop (probably had a bit of brake fade).Ive heard the pros and cons also but they dont match my experiences. Ive tried Nibbis, Mikunis, Chikunis, stocks, modified stock, full on generic ones with a clear plastic bowl lol... All on a 196, 212, and 420s to compare fairly.I’ve heard both schools of thought on here (as well as the interwebs at large) as to which is better: the factory carb or factory-style carb and the “motorcycle carbs”. Have heard pros and cons of each and am now thoroughly confuzzled.
The new bike has those newfangled high speed forks. That’s how you know it was fast. Fella had to hit something to help him stop (probably had a bit of brake fade).
It's a tiny frame so I definitely can't keep it. I won't talk to much on this one right now
I like ‘em small, they’re MINIbikes and some (with the folding handlebars) were able to fit into the cavernous trunks of yore (your poppa’s Buick land yacht). I’m 75” tall and don’t mind the smaller ones, they’re fun.
You can always start another thread for the other bike. This thread has already morphed beyond the original blown up motor topic. If it covers too many topics at once, it may collapse from its own weight…![]()
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