GeneralEclectic
Member
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2011
- Messages
- 37
FR691V with only 5 operating hours on it. Starts and runs perfectly, pulls strongly without breaking a sweat. However, it surprised the heck out of me the other day when it was sitting there idling with no load on it at about 1250-1300 RPM (that's where it was set at low idle when it was delivered) and suddenly started blowing some considerable oil smoke out the exhaust. I grabbed the throttle and sped it up to somewhere just over 2000RPM (an estimate) and the smoke stopped immediately. As an experiment, I returned it to low idle and within a minute the smoke reappeared. Far as I know, it burns no oil in normal operation. The level is right at the top of the range on the dipstick, and could be even a little bit over, depending on your measuring technique.
I don't see this as a serious problem, but it is kind of weird. I'd greatly prefer that the engine can run at low idle without putting down a smokescreen fit for concealing the Bismarck.
The usual suspects like rings and valve guides can probably be ruled out because there's no smoke or consumption at normal speeds under load. This kind of makes me think "crankcase breather", but am a bit stumped as to why only at low idle.
Aside from the iffy oil level, any other ideas from Kawasaki users?
I don't see this as a serious problem, but it is kind of weird. I'd greatly prefer that the engine can run at low idle without putting down a smokescreen fit for concealing the Bismarck.
The usual suspects like rings and valve guides can probably be ruled out because there's no smoke or consumption at normal speeds under load. This kind of makes me think "crankcase breather", but am a bit stumped as to why only at low idle.
Aside from the iffy oil level, any other ideas from Kawasaki users?