Guest dkgross Posted July 2, 2003 Posted July 2, 2003 ok..I coulda sworn I saw someone mention this, but I couldn't find it using the Seach engine. I've started to notice that under hard acceleration, my engine warning light comes on. It usually goes off pretty quickly, but, sometimes it stays on a while. My oil level seems ok when I check it.. help?
Kiwi Dave Posted July 2, 2003 Posted July 2, 2003 Look under "Cross posting a serious problem from MGNOC list, Loss of oil pressure under accelleration" on June 10. I've spotted the oil light on my 02 Lemon flash a couple of time, but try as I may, I cannot make it show when I want to. Since an intermediate oil change, and filling to the top level indicator, the problem hasn't reappeared. Fingers crossed!
jrt Posted July 2, 2003 Posted July 2, 2003 But the Reader's Digest version is that you're loosing oil pickup and consequently oil pressure- bad stuff. No oil to main's, to rods, etc. Let off the acceleration if you have to, and make sure you're oil is full to the top. I haven't looked in the crankcase, but it seems like a rearward mounted pickup should be on someone's 'to make' list. Anyone try a windage tray like Pete Roper put on his bike? Cheers, Jason
Guest Brent Posted July 2, 2003 Posted July 2, 2003 I also experienced this over the weekend when starting off from a complete stop, although I wouldn't say that I was under 'hard' acceleration. So when I got home I checked the oil level and found it between the high and low mark. I did this on the side stand, but should I do it with the bike straight up on the shop stand? Maybe this will show a lower level...
gthyni Posted July 2, 2003 Posted July 2, 2003 I have personally not had this problem, but I saw this solution on RaceCo's site. I think for us not-really-racing guys it should be sufficient to not drop the oil level more then just below the max level on the dipstick.
dlaing Posted July 2, 2003 Posted July 2, 2003 http://www.guzzitech.com/Windage-ed.html has a how too article. Looks like a lot of work and double the chance of leaks. But if it can save your engine from oil starvation, it is a good thing. What does a windage tray do? prevent sloshing and splashing of oil??? Perhaps strategically placed mesh will have a similar result without the need for gaskets, etc.
twhitaker Posted July 2, 2003 Posted July 2, 2003 The dipstick should be checked with the bike level. The manual says the dipstick should be screwed all the way in to take the measurement. I've seen the oil light phenomenon but only when the oil was near the low limit. I've read somewhere about bikes performing better with the oil near the low level. (Less oil to be thrown around.) Once I saw the light come on I immediately put in the extra oil and haven't seen the light since. Suggestion: Fill the oil to the high level. Put the bike on the side stand on level ground. Pull the dipstick and make a mark at the "new" level. That way you won't need help to check the oil level.
Guest dkgross Posted July 2, 2003 Posted July 2, 2003 thanks for all the tips!! Will check the oil level tonight!
Baldini Posted July 2, 2003 Posted July 2, 2003 Look on the V10 Centauro forum, there's a long discussion on this - they suggest slightly overfilling w/oil solves symptom. I think performance issue you mention is only small power loss from oil drag on crank. Has oil pick up on the newer Guzzis changed from the Tonti ones cos it was never an issue with them (on the road anyhow)...mind you there wasn't internet discussion forums either... If you check discussion on windage trays it's not clear that they work anyhow.
Guest jeremy Posted July 2, 2003 Posted July 2, 2003 yup, your correct, I have to over fill my centauro to keep the light off, I think they have the dipstick fixed for your bikes but just the same I would keep the oil all the way to full, that shoud cure the problem, there was a problem with the presure relief valve backing out on 4v's but then the oil light stays on at low rpm.
emry Posted July 3, 2003 Posted July 3, 2003 What does a windage tray do? prevent sloshing and splashing of oil??? Yep. In particular it is designed to keep oil from splashing up on to the quickly rotating crankshaft and causing extra drag. Very often it is used with a crankshaft scraper, this would help to "clean" excess oil off of the counterweights. This can be worth several Hp on high revving engines that encounter lots of oil movement. i.e. motorcycles and roadrace cars.
Guest kev11 Posted July 4, 2003 Posted July 4, 2003 2000 V11 sport oil capacity question. The owner manual says it take 3.5 liters ... I drained the oil without the filter and added 3.5 US quarts (thats less than 3.5 liters) I ran the engine then checked the level with the bike level and it's way over the max indicator on the dipstick. I'll probably drain some out to bring it to max.. and plan a complete oil and fiter change when I find the proper oil filter and wrench... Is it possible it only hold 3 qts ...is there a 1/2 quart in the filter ?
Mike Stewart Posted July 4, 2003 Posted July 4, 2003 There isn't a 1/2 Qt in the filter. I believe the oil volume spec. is on a dry engine, meaning oil lines and oil cooler are empty. There is no way I know of on how to drain the whole system without taking everything apart. There is an thermostat in the engine oil sump that opens when a determined temperture is reached that allows oil to flow to the engine oil cooler. Mike
dlaing Posted July 4, 2003 Posted July 4, 2003 Be sure you are draining from the lower drain plug. It is a good idea to drop the pan every few oil changes to check for schrapnel. No special tool needed to change the filter if you drop the pan. But have a spare gasket on hand in case you tear it..... When you refill, perhaps start with three quarts, measure, add a litte, measure, add a little, measure, run the engine, let sit a few minutes (engine off), have a beer, measure, have a beer. etc. I would have guessed 3.5 quarts would have been fine...oh well. Damn it is hard to balance the bike with one hand and slip the dip stick in without hitting the side or dipping early. I like that idea for re-marking the dipstick for being measured while on the side stand, but be careful doing that too, as it will be even easier to early dip if the tide of oil has moved to the bike's left. I think all the lube shops I go to in my car ALWAYS over fill a few millimeters because they are going by specification and not measurement, or maybe they are using the have a beer method?!?!
gthyni Posted July 4, 2003 Posted July 4, 2003 ... and the engine should be warm when draining. I always change/clean the oilfilters on every oil change.
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