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Cylinders end up dry...
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Originally posted by Staninator View Postno, don't do that, get too much fuel in there and you can hydraulic your motor and could crack a piston. Get a backfire and your bike is toast. If anything use a little spray starting fluid to fire your bike up. If your petcock is set to "prime" you have fuel running into the carbs all the time. Hence the smell of gas in your oil. Shut down and pull the petcock now. As for the compression test go ahead and do that, do a dry and a wet test. If that is inconclusive, you might want to do a leak down test as well. A wet test is a couple drops of oil in the cylinder to help seal the rings. Other then that, I wouldn't ride the bike until you got the carbs rebuilt and the petcock fixed.
sigpicMrBill Been a GSR member on and off since April 2002
1980 GS 750E Bought new in Feb of 1980
2015 CAN AM RTS
Stuff I've done to my bike:dancing: 1100E front end with new Sonic springs, 1100E swing arm conversion with new Progressive shocks installed, 530 sprockets/chain conversion, new SS brake lines, new brake pads. New SS fasteners through out. Rebuilt carbs, new EBC clutch springs and horn installed. New paint. Motor runs strong.
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Homie
Originally posted by Staninator View PostThat makes so much sense! How did you fix your issue?
But then something happened that I wasn't expecting...
On my way to work I saw a red '83 GS1100E for sale. It had some kind of ugly aftermarket fairing on it, but the lines were unmistakeable and the price was irresistible. So I bought the 1100 and sold the 750 "as is" without fixing the problem. No help with your issue I know. But the symptoms are similar so I would check your compression and if the compression indicates a problem, have a Leakdown test done.
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Originally posted by Staninator View Post.......The choke works fine but there may be an air leak somewhere.1981 gs650L
"We are all born ignorant, but you have to work hard to stay stupid" Ben Franklin
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