Some of you may remember me posting, last month that I was rebuilding the carbs on a 650EX. At that time I got literally a truck load of info from several of the veteran GS experts here, and I am extremely grateful for all the additional references.
That said, I have finished the rebuild on my carbs and after scouring the net (ebay) and eventually acquiring two replacement bodies and various other bits and pieces which needed replacing, I have finally reassembled and installed what should be a fully functioning rack of carbs. The problem is they hardly function at all.. :/
I have followed the rebuild guide as provided by Ed Ness to the 'T'.. all the way up to and including the bench sync. The only step I have left to accomplish in is the vacuum sync. And there inlies a problem. I can't even get the bike to stay running long enough to warm up the engine, much less get an accurate vacuum reading to set the sync.
I bought the Dynojet Stage 3 kit for these since I am running open element filters, notice I said open element and not pods. I bought the K&N RC-2382 dual flange open filters (which I highly do not recommend)!! I got these because of how close the frame comes to the mouth of the carbs. This filter appears to be thin and very easy to install as opposed to how far out pods would project when installed. In fact, the RC-2382 filters (though the K&N website lists my bike specifically as a fit) are extremely hard to get on the carbs and, when installed, touch each other and the frame. I plan on switching to pods, but am still worried that the #1 and #4 will touch the frame. But that's a different story. Since I have the open filters and stock exhaust, Dynojet recommends the .155 main jets, which I currently have installed.
To me, the engine seems like it's flooding. When I go to do a cold start, the engine will turn over two or three times and then start to try and fire on it's own, and it will sit there and kind of half way fire and start to turn itself over (with the assistance of the starter) for a while, I would estimate 20 to 40 revolutions (starter assisted) before it finally gets up enough momentum to keep itself alive while the throttle is just barely cracked open. After this, I have to keep the throttle at this barely cracked position to keep it running, but the engine eventually just fizzles out. If I open the throttle any higher, it just dies. If I return the throttle to idle, it just revs down to nothing and dies. Last night while keeping it alive with the barely open throttle trick, I reached under and started cranking up the idle position to try and keep it running without me holding it, and eventually topped out the idle screw with no effect on the rpm. After it dies I have to wait 15 to 20 minutes for the chambers to dry out before I can even attempt to try starting it again.
I have tried making adjustments to the air/fuel screws, but this seems to have no effect on the problem at all. I'm really at my wit's end, and I don't know where to go from here.. Tonight I plan on removing the carbs and doing another tear down and rebuild just to see if maybe there's something I've missed. I have no idea what it could be, for when I did this the first time I went page for page through the tutorial.
If anyone has any suggestions, ideas, comments... It would be greatly appreciated..
Thanks,
Ken
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