It was a hot summer day, with temperatures in the 90s. Little did I know that my gas cap was not vented, meant for a passenger car. As I made my way through a local twisty road, pressure started to build up inside the tank as the temperatures climbed. All of a sudden the RPMs climb up to 6000, and they stay there without me using the throttle at all!! My first reaction was "i am too young to die!" followed by "remember your training and you'll come back alive!". It was my first motorcycle ride, and I was out there solo. I got into this rhythm of applying the clutch, hard on the brakes, release, lean the bike, countersteer, stand it back up, repeat. I made it home still not knowing what the problem was, until way later in the day I opened the gas cap and heard the pressure escape.....had I not known the road well, and had I not seen my friends race at willow springs race multiple times, I might have had a very bad experience.....
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first ride was almost the last.
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curseboy
first ride was almost the last.
So the first day I took my 450 for a real ride after months and months of wrenching, I would be in for a surprise. During the rebuild process, I managed to lose the gas tank cap, which I replaced with a generic one from the autoparts store. I never knew how much that would come back to get me.
It was a hot summer day, with temperatures in the 90s. Little did I know that my gas cap was not vented, meant for a passenger car. As I made my way through a local twisty road, pressure started to build up inside the tank as the temperatures climbed. All of a sudden the RPMs climb up to 6000, and they stay there without me using the throttle at all!! My first reaction was "i am too young to die!" followed by "remember your training and you'll come back alive!". It was my first motorcycle ride, and I was out there solo. I got into this rhythm of applying the clutch, hard on the brakes, release, lean the bike, countersteer, stand it back up, repeat. I made it home still not knowing what the problem was, until way later in the day I opened the gas cap and heard the pressure escape.....had I not known the road well, and had I not seen my friends race at willow springs race multiple times, I might have had a very bad experience.....Tags: None
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Houdini
Originally posted by psyguy View Postman...........
Here's your post from 2006, did you ever find out what caused that problem?
We'll try the carb tuning technique, we're thinking that we might have to rebuild them first, when you give it gas, the rpm just stay up, almost like it's sticking open......also, on the left side, next to the mixture screw, there is another hole that's definitely a vacuum leak, anyone know what it is for?
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curseboy
Originally posted by Houdini View PostNice riding on what could have been a serious situation!!
Here's your post from 2006, did you ever find out what caused that problem?
We'll try the carb tuning technique, we're thinking that we might have to rebuild them first, when you give it gas, the rpm just stay up, almost like it's sticking open......also, on the left side, next to the mixture screw, there is another hole that's definitely a vacuum leak, anyone know what it is for?
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jmanz6
I agree, my first reflex when my dirtbike did that on a trail with lots of trees around was to grab the clutch and hit the kill. After I figured out what the issue was (throttle cable was binding up) and fixed it I then restarted and tookoff again.
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