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Carb removal

  • Thread starter Thread starter pearcey
  • Start date Start date
P

pearcey

Guest
I'm removing the carbs on my GS1000s as I need to fit a new (to me) starter motor. I've tried for 30min to get the starter motor bolted in without removing the carbs and I'm nowhere near.

Quick question. Would you remove the carbs from the rubber boots, or unbolt the rubber boots from the engine and take the carbs with it?

I've got some O rings from cycleorings just in case BTW.
 
You have an S!! Let's see some pictures.

I removed the carbs on my S for the 1st time this year. I was doing a rebuild.

I had pods which heled to make the job a little easier.

I removed the pods and then loosened up the clamps from the intake boots and popped the carbs out.

When I reinstalled them with the stock airbox, I wa expecting it to be a tough job, having read a lot of threads with people having a hard time installing the carbs into the tight space. Suprisingly, it only took me a couple of minutes.

I think it was easy due to the fact that I had all new intake boots.

I think it would be a tough job getting to the intake boot screws with the carbs in place.

So my vote is to remove the carbs from the boots.
 
The procedure for removing carbs is usually: loosen the airbox from the frame (so it can move back, giving about 1/2" more room), unclamp the boots from the airbox to the carbs, unclamp the boots from the carbs to the intake boots (the ones on the engine), loosen the clamp for the "choke" cable, move the airbox back, pull the carbs out of the intake boots, slide the carbs out part-way to the right, remove the "choke" and throttle cables.

Installation is, of course, the reverse. :D

Since you are replacing the intake boot o-rings, why not also pull your cam chain tensioner and replacing it's o-rings? If not replacing the o-rings, I would at least make sure the tensioner was operating the way it should. Too many times, it is installed incorrectly, preventing it from doing its job properly.

.
 
Ta I'll get on it.
I'll put some pictures up when the fairing comes back from the painters - a PO had run it down the road a bit!
 
The airbox is in 2 parts. Steve describes the procedure well but I would add remove the back part of the airbox from the bike. Undo the big circular clip under the seat and the single bolt on the LH side rear and just tug the thing out.
 
Since you are replacing the intake boot o-rings, why not also pull your cam chain tensioner and replacing it's o-rings? If not replacing the o-rings, I would at least make sure the tensioner was operating the way it should. Too many times, it is installed incorrectly, preventing it from doing its job properly.

.

Not to hijack the thread, but a quick question on the cam chain tensioner, I will assume it can be removed at any time, to be inspected, worked on, and so on, and put back in. It will not cause the chain to fall off, move or what ever, if while the tensioner is out nothing is moved with respect to the motor itself, ie not started or cranked.

I want to just remove and clean up, and replace O ring....

Will this be OK ?

Thanks
 
Not to hijack the thread, but a quick question on the cam chain tensioner, I will assume it can be removed at any time, to be inspected, worked on, and so on, and put back in. It will not cause the chain to fall off, move or what ever, if while the tensioner is out nothing is moved with respect to the motor itself, ie not started or cranked.

I want to just remove and clean up, and replace O ring....

Will this be OK ?

Thanks

Yes - just follow the instructions in the manual (detail on how to pull the thing out is important) and don't turn the engine at all.
 
Thanks, I don't have a manual, but I will see if I can find something online to help me out
 
Thanks,,,,,I just double checked and that is what I have and from where I got it....

All is good....
 
The airbox is in 2 parts. Steve describes the procedure well but I would add remove the back part of the airbox from the bike.
Sorry, I keep forgetting that the airboxes on the chain-driven bikes are not like the shafties that I usually work on. :o

.
 
Hi all

Got the starter motor bolted in without getting the carbs off in the end. Bit of a shame as I would probably have learnt a bit, but meant I could go for a ride today instead of spannering up. And didn't mess anything up.

All this air filter business. I know that it's a departure from stock, but I'm always pretty glad that I've got pods - the PO fitted them and the bike didn't come with an airbox. Don't know if the old airboxes would fit the new carbs he put in either.

pearcey
 
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