Welding up the O2 exhaust sensor bung on the PC800

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After my little incident with a backfire causing the JB-Welded exhaust O2 sensor bung to blow out of my PC800, I decided it was time to weld up the bung properly.

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As luck would have it, Andrew has a portable welder and volunteered to do some welding for me.

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We had to take off the JB Weld from the exhaust to give a clean surface to weld to.

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Then Andrew tacked on the O2 sensor bung with the exhaust in place.


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Then we removed the exhaust from the bike.  The front cylinder exhaust pipe would not detach from the resonator chamber so we ended up cutting it off with a hacksaw.  Not the most ideal situation but it got the muffler assembly off.

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Then we setup to weld the O2 sensor bung onto the exhaust system.

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Next I put the exhaust back on the bike.  I found some exhaust pipe of the right diameter to barely slip over the existing pipe.  I used a couple exhaust band clamps to make the seal but the front one wouldn’t hold properly.
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At least the O2 sensor is in the right place now.

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At this point I also discovered that my front cylinder spark plugs were fouled.  I replaced them with Iridium plugs that I had been saving for a special occasion.  It was probably 40,000 miles since the last time these plugs were changed and my fuel injection experimentation certainly hasn’t helped them any.

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With the exhaust still leaking from the right clamp, I had to find another solution.

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Thus I made some soup for lunch with a particularly tall can.

20150522_134932And now I have an exhaust patch made with a soup can, exhaust putty (basically furnace cement), and exhaust tape (basically fiberglass mesh).  It all holds well and I haven’t had another exhaust leak.  Certainly this isn’t the preferred method of rejoining a PC800 exhaust to the bike but it’s what I had to do to make it all work.  The other points where I could have disconnected the front exhaust tube were equally rusted in place as the rear disconnect point.

Now back to tuning…

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