1. Cleaned gas tank, red kote, rebuilt petcock (actually worked :P).
2. Cleaned the carbs, throughly, twice, dipped for 12 hr, then 24. Blew air through all the passages and circuits, replaced o-rings with kit from guy on here.
3. Replaced Air Filter(K&N in airbox, with light oil), Air Box Boots, Intake Boots, intake boot o-rings, and boot clamps, all new.
4. Replaced clutch cable, and adjusted according to manual.
5. Replaced throttle cable and adjusted according to manual.
6. Relay mod for coils, this actually made the biggest difference in my bike actually running almost all the time :P.
I have NOT done a valve adjustment, but I am planning on doing that fairly soon (i.e. next week or two when I have some time).
The only 2 weird things are, my main jets are 120's instead of 115 stock (the stock ones were "glued" because po broke them) and the choke plungers are plungers from a set of gs450ga carbs.
The reason I mention the plungers is that there is a slight gap between the plunger and the hole in the top part of the carb where the diaphrams are, I'm assuming that when the choke circuit is opened, this allows air to get pulled in through the hole at the near the airbox top part of the carb throat, and into the enrichment circuit.
look at the end of the choke plunger pictures here, and I think you can see the "shrink" of the GA compared to the LF plunger.
GA Plunger:
LF Plunger:
So, my question is, I cannot get the bike to idle at 1100 without running the choke, or turning the idle knob up quite high. Now this would be fine, but if the idle knob is turned up enough to keep the bike from dying without choke, I get a hanging idle once I pass 4.5k rpm.
Does anyone thing that the slight gap in the GA plungers could somehow be allowing enough air to get into the enrichment circuit that I'm running lean, hence the need for choking / opening the throat so much?
As I've said, I changed out everything that I would think would be causing an air leak, so if anyone could point me in a direction that makes sense, I would be a very happy camper.
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