Bill2001 wrote:I don't think it was the carb (entirely)-- it ran too well......
Although the jetting-- needle and slide-- were different, there is an envelope of needle-slide-jet combos will work......
The new carb also had differences in the venturi..........
At any rate, a carb for that model should work out of the box, but may need "fine tuning.".......
I don't suspect leaks......
--Bill
Bill,
You know, of course, that each of these statements (except one) is an assumption. Running too well is actually a potential symptom of a mistuned carb, depending on what it is you interpreted as "running well." Running too well could also be interpreted as borderline lean, a condition that apparently you didn't verify. If it were too rich, you would think it was a bit rough perhaps, but you probably wouldn't conclude that it was running too well.
Yes, there is an envelope of differences within which any bike will work, but in the end, only one combination is correct for any given bike on a given day. Without verifying where in the envelope you are, it is only guess work whether where you are is also good enough, or will lead to a seizure. Sometimes the difference between running well and seizing is the time spent at wide open throttle, or at whichever throttle position was too lean for conditions.
Not sure what you mean by differences in the venturi, since any 24mm Mikuni is going to have the same basic design as far as the venturi itself is concerned. Differences in body casting shouldn't be all that apparent. What did you see that was different?
A carb "for that model" usually has whatever jetting the manufacturer thinks should go in it, since it could mount to anything from a moped to a go kart. Even if you get one "pre-tuned" by a Hodaka supplier, it is still just a ball park estimate of what will work, so no, I would not agree that one offered for that model will necessarily "work" out of the box. It might run out of the box, and it might even run pretty good out of the box, but unless or until you actually jet it, it isn't anything but assumed to be okay. No one knows reliably what jetting your bike requires, so no one can pre-jet a carb for you. Stock or manufacturers jetting is only roughly in the range of where it will end up based on assumption about displacement of an engine. New carbs often need more than a bit of "fine tuning."
I don't suspect leaks generally either, but as Mark Twain said, "Supposing is good, but finding out is better."
Bottom line here is that if you didn't verify tuning or leaks, you don't know if it was tuned correctly or if there was an air leak. What you do know is that it seized, so something wasn't right. There are so many possibilities, it is not really possible to point to the cause without a detailed tear down, and even then, you may not find the exact cause. Still, I would expect the consensus guess to be that it was too lean for one reason or another.
Not all seizures result in damage beyond use. Once you take it apart you will know more. If it won't kick over there is a good chance that it will need at least piston and rings. About the only thing I don't think was the cause is your fuel mix. Yamalube at 28:1 is fine.