Another Saturday, and another opportunity to spend several 
                    hours on the Big Twin, after an early morning 2 hour paddle 
                    in the Larsboat 
                    on the near-by Meramec River.
                  
                    
                       
                          (click images to enlarge) | 
                    
                  
                  The first thing that I did was to remove the magneto that 
                    I had previously re-mounted; not due to any problems, but 
                    because I had decided to make the installation of a lanyard 
                    equiped safety shut-down switch the subject of a future column, 
                    and the Big Twin would serve as a guinea pig for that. So 
                    the magneto was removed and some alterations made and a few 
                    photos taken and then it was remounted.
                    
                    
 
                    One may have noted that in the previous part of this column, 
                    I made no mention of setting the "gap" on the ignition 
                    points before testing for a spark; this was not an omission 
                    in my writing. I just forgot to adjust them. That the ignition 
                    system would still produce a spark is a testament to it's 
                    reliability. After reinstalling the magneto today, I did remember 
                    to adjust the point gap to .020, using a cheap feeler gauge 
                    and a regular screwdriver which are the only tools required.
                    
                    The flywheel was then installed and torqued and the recoil 
                    starter remounted.
                    
                    I make it a habit to always replace the fuel hoses on any 
                    engine that I am "refurbishing," and the Big Twin 
                    was no exception. The only hoses on this - pressure-tank-utilizing 
                    engine are the hose which conducts the pressure from the crankcase 
                    to the "quick connect" fitting, and the hose from 
                    the quick connect fitting to the carburetor which carries 
                    the fuel. Although this engine had a fuel strainer incorporated 
                    into the carburetor, I added a small "in-line: fuel filter 
                    as well, which is my habit.
                  
Finally, 
                    the adjustment synchronizing the ignition advance to the carburetor 
                    throttle valve was made. On most of these old OMC's this is 
                    no more complicated than loosening a tapered "cam" 
                    and moving it back and forth until the throttle valve begins 
                    to open when the valve's "follower," which rides 
                    on the cam, reaches a certain mark on the cam. No "diagnostic" 
                    computer needed.
                    
                    What WAS now needed was a solid mounting surface in order 
                    to attempt to start the Big Twin, and the AF4 
                    provided that; the Big Twin was clamped to the transom with 
                    it's "leg" submerged in water in the plastic 55-gallon 
                    drum that serves as my outboard motor :"test tank." 
                    The low- and high-speed mixture adjusting needles were set 
                    at about 1 full turn open (not the correct setting it turns 
                    out) and I commenced to "yanking" on the starter 
                    rope of this manual-start-only engine.
                    
                    
After 
                    a few pulls, the thing actually started, coughing and wheezing 
                    as it blew smoke and water in large quantities; some fiddling 
                    with the mixture controls settled it down a bit, and I left 
                    it running at a fast idle while I took a few photos. Then 
                    the thing coughed on last time and quit. I cranked it over 
                    several times, then several times more, and then some more, 
                    but it would not start.
                    
                    I made some adjustments to the mixture needles and pulled 
                    the rope some more and it still would not start.
                    
                    A few more adjustments, then some tries with the choke off, 
                    then with the choke on, then with the mixture needles screwed-down 
                    shut (in case it was flooded) but nothing would coax the engine 
                    to fire-off.
                    
                    It is at this point in the process that people tend to become 
                    irrational and end-up yanking the starter rope until they 
                    are blue in the face, or end up grinding away at the electric 
                    start until the battery is dead, or until the starter motor 
                    overheats so bad that it throws it's solder all over itself 
                    and self-destructs.
                    
                    After about 10 minutes of attempting to start an engine that 
                    had been running just moments before, I decided it was time 
                    for some trouble-shooting. since numerous adjustments had 
                    already been made to the carb with nary a hint of an intention 
                    to run again, I decided to check to see if the magneto was 
                    still working. Removing the spark plugs and grounding them 
                    to the engine block revealed no spark when the engine was 
                    cranked. The recoil starter was removed and the flywheel slowly 
                    rotated by hand, revealing a slight"clicking" or 
                    snapping noise. Could be a spark jumping to a "ground," 
                    or could be something hitting the flywheel. Since I was careful 
                    to check for any interference with the flywheel when I mounted 
                    the magneto, I could not believe that there was a problem 
                    now, but I drug out the flywheel puller anyway and removed 
                    the flywheel.
                    
                    
As 
                    I lifted the flywheel off, I immediately noticed that one 
                    of the condenser' wires was broken off; evidently the flywheel 
                    magnet caught it and ripped it apart. That would prevent one 
                    cylinder from sparking, and while a properly turned 2-cycle, 
                    2-cylinder engine will often run on one live cylinder, the 
                    Big Twin had only been running for a minute or two and was 
                    far from being "in tune."
                    
                    I replaced the damaged condenser with one from my stock, and 
                    also rechecked the point gap setting (as one should always 
                    do whenever the magneto is disturbed,) and "buttoned-up" 
                    the engine again, making darn sure that the wires underneath 
                    the flywheel were routed well clear of rotating parts.
                    
                    
A 
                    few more pulls on the starter rope and the engine fired-up 
                    again. A few minutes of running showed that the engine was 
                    most likely ambitious-enough to keep running for a while. 
                    It also was pumping cooling water well, although after several 
                    minutes the discharge water began to heat-up to the point 
                    that it was almost too hot to keep one's hand in the stream. 
                    An outboard run in a bucket can overheat very easily, however, 
                    so while it is an item to check carefully during the engine's 
                    first run on a boat, at this point I will not consider it 
                    a problem.
                    
                    Tomorrow I will haul the AF4 
                    and Big Twin down to the launch ramp on the Meramec River, 
                    where the park gates are unlocked at 7:00 am but the gentleman 
                    who collects the ramp fee does not arrive at work until 8:00, 
                    leaving me with a one-hour "window of opportunity" 
                    for a free launch.
                  On to Part 
                    4