Thanks for your comments.
Why do you suppose this resulted in oiling the exhaust?
With regard to oiling, did you check the drool tube? If that tube (quickly) reached capacity, would that result in the exhaust oiling?
Is the oil down enough to notice on the dipstick?
When one or more spark plug wires are crossed, the timing of fuel/air compression does not align with the delivery of the spark. This causes cylinder misfires, and the unburned fuel usually flows out the exhaust. I think this can blow a head gasket too.
Now a blower increases compression no? So a misfire with higher compression blows oil (and unburned fuel) past the rings in exhaust stroke?
Would it be prudent to carry a fire extinguisher on your shake down ride? (not trying to be a smart ass)
There's no drool tube. Or airbox. Entire ingress system is replaced with a carb, blower and manifold.
I suspect that the spark on #6 while in compression probably fired, that one could damage the engine. The others put unburned mixture into the exhaust and caused backfires, I'm thinking.
Oil is not visibly down on the dipstick. Blown head gasket should show up in other ways, like lost compression. Typically coolant in crank oil, oil in coolant. Didn't see those yet. The oil dripping from exhaust is very black while oil in crankcase is very fresh. But then the exhaust is full of soot so no surprise.
Don't know about the oil moving past the rings on exhaust stroke. It's somehow getting in the exhaust and it seems this may be the only path though I don't understand that. How did there get to be pressure moving the oil? The crankcase is vented.
Not concerned about a fire inside the exhaust. Just shutting the engine off should deprive that of oxygen. But I have a small extinguisher I could put inside my jacket.
Where does the crankcase vent with the blower installed?
I would think the cylinder with the advanced ignition timing would exhibit very high cylinder pressure resulting in excessive blow by into the crankcase.
The usual place for the crank to vent is into the air cleaner but not sure on a blown bike.
It has a separate crank breather vent to atmosphere like an old car. Not returned to the air inlet.
Another thought, the "oil" could have been a little oil from the compression check and a lot of dirty condensate water from the swapped wire misfiring. water is a byproduct of the combustion process, and misfiring can cause a lot more (liquid) of it, as those cylinders aren't burning hot enough to vaporize it as normal.
Oil soaked into the packing can take a while to burn off, calls for an old fashioned Italian tune up.
Much more oil than what I squirted into cylinders 4 & 6. It is extremely black however. The glasspacks are handmade, glass and stainless steel wool hybrids, built angled to follow the pipe's mandrel bend, with handmade smaller internal tube with holes, and crossover - which surprised me it was dripping oil too. It's quieter than you might expect. What's an "old fashioned Italian tune up"?