I have a 1980 GS850 I will be tearing into soon, it ran last summer and died last summer. I'm not sure what's wrong with it, and I'm not about to pay someone to tell me when I have metric wrenches sitting in my tool box. I have never worked on a bike motor in my life, I paid a nice premium to a good metric mechanic for him to straighten out my carbs but it was more money then I want to spend again. I laid this out as factually as I could for ease of use so here goes...
What happened:
Freeway speed, it started feeling challenged to maintain the speed, almost like the pistons grew too large for the cylinder. (I know that is not possible but thats how it felt. "bogging down") I pulled over, shut it down, and let it sit. It wouldn't start again until after it cooled down and then it made horrible metal on metal noises. I limped it home, 25mph tops and parked it. I haven't started it again out of fear of grenading the whole motor.
Whats been done:
Jetted carbs, oil changed, filters etc. intake is the pod filters, (it didn't come with an air box when I bought it.) Carbs rebuilt/syncd'. Straight pipes (off of a harley, no baffles)
The plan:
I intend to pull the motor out of the frame, and do a complete rebuild from its toenails to the top of its head. I want a bullet proof bike that I can just enjoy with regular maintenance. I don't plan on rushing this. I want this motor done right and if it takes all summer for me to get there then it takes all summer.
What I need:
Any pointers on the actual rebuild of the 850. Do's/Dont's, where to start, what to look for, things that are more troublesome areas then others. Indicators that the motor can be saved, Indicators that the motor should be scrapped.
What I have:
I have a good spot to work, the majority of the tools to do so, the shop manual, a big can of elbow grease, and a huge fear of wrecking the motor haha
thanks for taking the time to read through this!
Zack.
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