As many will recall, the bike has pods (don't hate) and a 4-1 pipe. The current jetting is:
Pilot - 17.5
Fuel Screw - 1.25 turns out
Air Screw - 2 turns adjusted with ColorTune
Needle - 4th slot
Mains - 117.5
Fresh intake boots and o-rings.
Carbs are fully cleaned, with new o-rings, etc.
Valve clearances are healthy.
Carbs vacuum synched.
The bike starts and runs OK. It doesn't like to idle below about 1,200, which I think is a tad high. Otherwise it idles and pulls from a stop through the gears, etc. Pilot circuit plug chops show decent, perhaps a bit lean, results, except for the No. 1 cylinder which tends to be slightly rich. More on that mystery in a separate thread, I think.
Here's where it gets weird. After a few minutes of riding, the idle likes to settle in a bit higher, about 2,000 rpm. It doesn't hang there, as a throttle twist will rev the bike fine and then snap back to the 2,000 RPM mark. If I blip the throttle very slightly, however, the idle will return to 1,200 RPM.
Oddly, neither idle levels (the high 2,000 or the lower 1,200) seem to respond to turns of the main idle knob. When I have tried to adjust that screw, I detect no changes until the next stop light, where the idle settles in much lower or higher, and then responds to the idle screw adjustment.
This sure seems like a mechanical issue on the throttle or slides, such that the slides aren't returning to the proper closed position. I have repeatedly checked the slides for snags or sticking. They move nice and easily in the carbs. The cables also seem to be free of snags, and I have tried to fine-tune those adjustments to see if that's what causes the idle to misbehave.
The issue does not happen in the garage BTW. Only after riding around a short while. Perhaps the engine heat somehow affects the cables running under the tank and causes them to bind slightly?
Any other ideas?
Comment