I'm trying to figure out the best course here.
I was riding to work and heard a slight tapping, figured maybe the timing was a tad off or the valve needed to be adjusted. No biggie, I'll do it this weekend. I hop on to ride home and ~10 miles into my ride I start hearing what sounds like a grinding metal noise whenever I give the throttle a good twist coming from the engine. If I ease up it seems to go away. After another ~10 miles it won't stop ticking. Another 5 miles and there's a LOUD POP a dozen backfires and she dead.
I pull over and smell burning something and there's a faint trail of smoke coming from the left side of the engine. If I try and start it it just backfires and smells horrific. Nothing visual seems out of the ordinary that I've seen, I plan on giving it a good look see tomorrow after work.
I'm fairly mechanically inclined, do I try stripping the engine, toss it in the trash, or what. My goal is to sell this once it's running or "accidentally" lit on fire and get a more reliable modern commuter but I don't want to put hundreds of hours or dollars into fixing it.
Any suggestions as to what it sounds like and how much work we're talking. If it's not too bad but complicated I may just send it to a mechanic and have them do it, otherwise I'd like to save the cash and do it myself.
I was riding to work and heard a slight tapping, figured maybe the timing was a tad off or the valve needed to be adjusted. No biggie, I'll do it this weekend. I hop on to ride home and ~10 miles into my ride I start hearing what sounds like a grinding metal noise whenever I give the throttle a good twist coming from the engine. If I ease up it seems to go away. After another ~10 miles it won't stop ticking. Another 5 miles and there's a LOUD POP a dozen backfires and she dead.
I pull over and smell burning something and there's a faint trail of smoke coming from the left side of the engine. If I try and start it it just backfires and smells horrific. Nothing visual seems out of the ordinary that I've seen, I plan on giving it a good look see tomorrow after work.
I'm fairly mechanically inclined, do I try stripping the engine, toss it in the trash, or what. My goal is to sell this once it's running or "accidentally" lit on fire and get a more reliable modern commuter but I don't want to put hundreds of hours or dollars into fixing it.
Any suggestions as to what it sounds like and how much work we're talking. If it's not too bad but complicated I may just send it to a mechanic and have them do it, otherwise I'd like to save the cash and do it myself.