Hi. I've been trying to repair my Honda mower with a GCV190 engine since late winter, time permitting. (I ran it dry on oil and snapped the connecting rod last year.) The recommendation on this forum was to clean the crankshaft journal with acid and give it a try. I put all new parts inside the engine except I kept the same crankshaft and governor. I cleaned the journal with acid and emery cloth. The mower ran way too fast because I actually had a bad governor and didn't know it. OK so I replaced the governor and the engine ran great but it became impossible to restart. The crankshaft could only be turned with a socket wrench. It was really stiff. Was it because the bearing was torqued too tight on the crankshaft, was the shaft slightly bent, or what? That's the background.
Finally, I said what the hell and I bought a new crankshaft so that everything would be brand new and then I could eliminate some variables. I used plastigauge to check the clearance and I'm a bit tight at .001 so I torqued down a bit so now I'm at .0015, which I think should be OK and certainly can't be the cause of the frozen shaft. So everything is new and on spec yet the shaft won't turn by hand.
Long story ending: In running the new connecting rod bearing with the old crankshaft journal it looks like I scored the connecting rod lower bearing and the cap. See photo. I think the black marks are from the gasket material getting in the oil. If I run my fingernail across the bearing I can feel some tiny grooves once in awhile. Is this the probable reason the shaft won't turn? Can I smooth down the bearing with emery cloth and see if it then turns or will that screw up the clearances? I obviously don't have much experience but I've enjoyed learning a lot. I need to get this mower running ASAP so any feedback would be much appreciated.
Finally, I said what the hell and I bought a new crankshaft so that everything would be brand new and then I could eliminate some variables. I used plastigauge to check the clearance and I'm a bit tight at .001 so I torqued down a bit so now I'm at .0015, which I think should be OK and certainly can't be the cause of the frozen shaft. So everything is new and on spec yet the shaft won't turn by hand.
Long story ending: In running the new connecting rod bearing with the old crankshaft journal it looks like I scored the connecting rod lower bearing and the cap. See photo. I think the black marks are from the gasket material getting in the oil. If I run my fingernail across the bearing I can feel some tiny grooves once in awhile. Is this the probable reason the shaft won't turn? Can I smooth down the bearing with emery cloth and see if it then turns or will that screw up the clearances? I obviously don't have much experience but I've enjoyed learning a lot. I need to get this mower running ASAP so any feedback would be much appreciated.