J
jpettigrew
Guest
I have been working on a 1978 GS 400 that I have had for several years. It has not been ridden a lot in the last 10 to 20 years. The engine starts and runs well at higher RPM's but due not like getting from low RPM to higher RPM (sluggish). Pulling spark plug wires show that the left cylinder is a little dead as pulling the left plug wire makes little difference as pulling the right wire kills the motor. I have done a complete rebuild of the carbs and I have put in new plugs, points and condenser. Here is where I stand as of this date:
1. The air boot between the carb and air box on the left side was cracked and a replacement could not be located. Using my dirt bike past, I used a piece of 2" radiator hose in its place. I have heard that messing with the intake system can require rejetting. Can this be causing problems?
2. Can the diaphragm carb sliders get old and stiff enough to cause these type of problems?
3. When I put the new points in and adjusted the gap to specs, I had to rotate the backing plate all the way to one side to try and set the timing. I still fell short and had to alter the point gap a touch to get the timing spot on. I am at wits end trying to figure out what is causing this. Has anyone else run into this before?
4. Trying to adjust the valves showed me that there are differing opinions on what the clearance should be. Some say the same for intake and exhaust valve, some say two different numbers. My Chilton manual says .0012" to .003", but I have reason to believe that this is way low. When the gap is less than what you can gauge, what is the best way to get close to how much you have to reduce your shim size?
Thanks for your help.
1. The air boot between the carb and air box on the left side was cracked and a replacement could not be located. Using my dirt bike past, I used a piece of 2" radiator hose in its place. I have heard that messing with the intake system can require rejetting. Can this be causing problems?
2. Can the diaphragm carb sliders get old and stiff enough to cause these type of problems?
3. When I put the new points in and adjusted the gap to specs, I had to rotate the backing plate all the way to one side to try and set the timing. I still fell short and had to alter the point gap a touch to get the timing spot on. I am at wits end trying to figure out what is causing this. Has anyone else run into this before?
4. Trying to adjust the valves showed me that there are differing opinions on what the clearance should be. Some say the same for intake and exhaust valve, some say two different numbers. My Chilton manual says .0012" to .003", but I have reason to believe that this is way low. When the gap is less than what you can gauge, what is the best way to get close to how much you have to reduce your shim size?
Thanks for your help.