Im sorry but Im really lost, in this post you say that the only thing that hasn't been changed out is the carb and cylinder .now your saying It cant be carb and the cdi hasn't been changed out. What parts are the common denominator that resulted in the three pistons having holes in them. The CDI ?
i do not have time right now to explain what is going on. You are missing something very basic that is causing some detonation, then preignition and then run-away detonation and then then blowing a hole in the piston.Use a timing light to check the ignition timing curve.Were you riding the engine in the medium to high rpm range with the throttle position around 1/2 throttle opening or less? Yes!! Does the exhaust system have a spark arrestor? No spark arrestor!!Have you inspected your muffler for a broken core or anything that may be offering slightly more restriction than the original design intended? No i have notan engine that is burning holes in the piston like you have pictured was talking to you telling you what it was getting ready to do. Remember these sounds. This is detonation. Pre-ignition does not make any sounds. Remember the sounds it was making intermittently the last 10 to 20 seconds before it quit. This is intermittent detonation. Remember the tone of the engine and sound the last 5 to 10 seconds before it quit. This is run-away detonation and the engine is in the process of drilling the hole. The 10 minutes you rode the bike had nothing to do with the failure. When you have something drastically wrong with the engine build or tune (air fuel ratio and or ignition timing) the above damage can be done it less than 30 seconds from the time the engine first began telling you what it was going to do, to the time that it did it.
there is no warning that detonation is happening. Arlan at led thinks this could be the risk of running av gas,as opposed to running race fuel, so this last time i ran 110 race fuel. No change, the only warning was just before it blows through the piston there is a 1/2 second raise in rpm's and then it's done.
I have never burned a hole in a piston that I was not given ample warning.......the problem was, I did not have the experience at that time to recognize what the engine was telling me. I have made a lot of pistons look just like your pistons early in my career, before I learned to pay close attention to the slight changes in the sound of the engine and slight performance change as the process is set in motion. The AV-gas IS NOT THE PROBLEM unless the oil you are using is not mixing homogeneously. Have you given your fuel the tried and proven "jar test"I will ask this very important question again. Were you cruising at medium to high RPM at partial throttle???
Do you have one of these attached to your motor ?
how bad was that air leak? Was it not hold any pressure or how quick was the drop rate?
no need to reply to this ,but a leak that bad would have been noticed by anyone. You would not have gotten the idle to calm down. its only my opinion that the seal was damaged during the failure .An explosion entering the lower end could easily mess up some seals and I cant imagine why the new seals you had installed just before this failure would leak. .I wish the best of luck to you
was the spark plug loose each time the engine failed?