Well, I think the LC is just about ready for its MOT. The brake, indicator and headlight wiring has been sorted out; and a flasher relay put in. Initially it was thought that the neutral and oil switches were mixed up in the wiring, as the oil light came on when the bike was in neutral, and the neutral light didn't come on. But: I now know the oil light is designed to do this as a test - obviously then it stays on in gear if there is low oil. Further investigation into the neutral showed... no bulb! So that is all sorted now. Also some old wires behind the headlamp had become stiff, and broken - easily fixed. A speedo cable has been put on. I found a chain guard for a mark I which has been adapted and fixed on. I got a lovely pair of chrome mirrors with, oddly, two left hand threads - a thread adaptor was found for the left hand side, only there are no locking nuts for the mirrors - and left hand thread ones have proved difficult to find! However, I have been experimenting with silicon (not enough friction) and some kind of glue to try and keep the darned things in the right place..!

- Don't want to use threadlock, as that just seems too permanent.
Got some silver bar ends, dust caps

and a nice chrome tax disc holder (no disc to put in it yet!).
All thats left is/was the fuel/oil mix. And the bike would start, run for a few minutes, then putt out if the revs were allowed to die. So the spark plug was cleaned, and the revs turned up a little. So far so good - except it has far too much oil in it (absolutely up to the top of the view glass). There is a max and min mark and its waaaaay over the max.
Question: if there is too much oil in here, bearing in mind it is transmission oil - will this make any difference to the oil chucked out the exhaust? It doesn't get burned in the engine, does it??
Although it
is[i/] a two-stroke, and it is going to be smokier than most anyway, general feeling is that its pretty smokey.
If running in the garage, after a couple of minutes the smoke starts spewing out over the top of the garage door..! (an up-and-over door.)
Does turning the fuel up on the carb make a difference to this? As it is auto-lube, after all - am I making much sense?
Meaning, Surely autolube means that the higher the revs, the more auto-lube is pumped into the fuel.
So by turning the throttle stop screw, won't this just increase the autolube accordingly..? Or not. Does the autolube pump kick in when the revs go above so many 000's rpm.
The spark plug was oiled up. Any ideas why a two-stroker might run with too much oil - and this can only be 2stroke autolube oil, right?
(It has allegedly had new bearings fitted; I appreciate that worn seals will cause oil to leak and be lost that way)