R
rogerramjet
Guest
Hello to all, and thank you so much for all your help. This is the first time I haven't been able to search/find an answer. I bought my 1981 GS850G about 18 months ago, and began the teardown and near-restoration about a year ago. (This is my second GS. The first was a 1977 GS750.) At that time the bike ran pretty well. I made all kinds of mistakes and continue to do so. First, I put the entire carb rack in the dishwasher to degrease it. Worked great, but oxidized the hell out of the carbs. So I soda-blasted the outsides, rebuilt-ish them, painted them and spent the next 6 months working on everything else. I finally got the bike together, re-wired, and filled with gas, and I was having a fuel/air delivery problem so I decided to rebuild them for real this time. Berryman's, rebuild kits from Z1, the whole deal. In my zeal to tear them down, I stripped the air screw (the one under the cap) in the #1 carb. It was turning out, got real hard to turn, then stopped. I used pb blaster, gentle heat from a butane torch, and nothing. By this time the slot was stripped, so I decided to drill it out. I drilled a hole in it, inserted the extractor, and it snapped. So, I bought a replacement from ebay from a 1980 GS850. The thing looked identical to the original three, and all the bits and pieces fit nicely. Now I have a cold cylinder in #1. Upon closer inspection, the new carb body seems to be missing an additional passage in the corner (opposite the brass tube that sticks into the bowl) that gets sealed up by the float bowl and gasket, and the brass tube has a reducer in its opening. I have new dyna coils, new spark plugs, new wires. Cylinder 4 is hot. Could these anatomic differences really keep the fuel from being delivered? I should say that the exhaust does get warmish with full choke. Removing the spark plug wire at idle does not change the revs at all. What are my options?