I did the carbs last season, but there was some rust in the tank that sludged them up, so off they went.
Dipped them for 24h, like a boss , sprayed, poked through all the tiny bits, etc.
While they soaked, I went ahead an double checked my valves, all gaps were nice and sexy, right on the money.
I also pulled the exhaust to clean it and the engine a bit and to change the oil. One of my filter cover studs is a bit stripped, so I wanted to replace it. That bastard will not move. I'll probably revisit that again with another oil change, once I get a torch for heat to loosen that stud.
Anyway, I reassembled the carbs with the following settings:
Pilot jet = 15 (had a 17.5 awhile back but it ran too rich).
Fuel screw = about 7/8 out
Air = started 2 turns out, did my best to get highest idle. I still struggle to catch those RPM changes though.
Needle = 4th slot down.
Main = 120 (had 125s, so I wanted to bring that down a touch. Stock mains are 102 or 105 IIRC)
My carb boots are good and the intake rings are new from last year. Yes, I have pods and 4-1. Don't hate.
Last night I synched the carbs (bench and carbtune), but they were pretty finnicky. More so than in the past.
This morning, she starts and warms up OK, but once I took it around the block, the engine refuses to drop RPMs. Could be a really bad hanging idle or a sticky throttle cable. I spray checked for air leaks and came up with nothing. As hard as that idle was hanging, even a ghetto spray test should reveal such a large leak. Yes, I replaced the synch screws.
So I am launching this thread to get ideas and track my work.
For starters, here is a weird result. All the operating symptoms shout lean mix and/or air leak. I will pull the carbs again today to root that out. I'll also clean and oil those pods, in case they are too dry. When I checked the plugs after tooling around the block, however, they were black and sooty, showing richness. What the hell?
So here is the battle plan for today:
-- Pull carbs and double check passages and jets. If this starting plan fails, I'll dip them again, but I was hoping to ride this weekend.
-- Pull pods and clean and re-oil them.
-- Lube and hunt down binds in the throttle cables. The throttle snaps back while the engine is off. I cannot tell if the RPMs staying high means the throttle is not closing when the engine is running or if there is just a bad air leak somewhere. The cables are new as of last Fall and resized for my lower bars. They worked fine before, but I'll see if they are binding somehow.
Any other ideas for this lean behavior and rich plugs?
Also, during the synch process, I noticed that my slides give very little room for adjustment. At the bench, it takes a lot more turning of the idle screw to get the slides to the thin drill bit gap (like 1/16"). Individually, however, the slides have almost no room in the screws to go up. Net result is I have less idle screw range and almost no adjustment range per slide.
What can I do to "reset" this so backing out the idle screw will leave me enough room to adjust the slides individually?
As I said before, I have a really hard time hearing, spotting idle changes when adjusting the air screw per the usual process with the idle at 900 RPM or so. A buddy mentioned doing the highest idle setting at higher RPM (like 2,500) to dial in the mixture at the higher end of the pilot circuit.
Has anyone tried this highest idle at 2,500 RPM method?
TIA
Comment