My bike: 1978 GS750 EC model 17k miles or so on the engine, with Mikuni VM26SS carbs - bought the thing in summer of 2012, ran great for about a year, until August of 2013. Now the weather's getting warm and I want to ride again!!!
Problem: the darn thing just wont run right! I can get it to start, but it wont really idle, or run at all without constant manipulation of the choke. Putting it into gear and trying to move it results in an instant stall, seems to be starving for fuel. Additionally, the bike will normally stall when you roll on the throttle in neutral, revs up to maybe 5k rpms, but then seems to starve out for fuel. I took it to a bike shop before I dismantled it, and they diagnosed it for me as definitely a carburetion, or fuel delivery problem. The bike also drips oil, I attached a photo of the spot I believe it leaks from - I saw it drip while running, just under the circular cap that attaches to the valve cover on the very top of the engine (removed in photo). There appears to be a rubber seal there that I would suspect is the source of the leak.
What I have done: Replaced the valve/head cover gasket, as well as the oil breather gasket, but not the head gasket. I completely tore down and rebuilt the carburetors. This involved dunking each one in the Gunk paint can of carb cleaner, 3 or 4 cans of carb spray, accompanied with a new set of seals from Robert Barr @ cycleorings.com. Additionally, I purchased the intake boot o rings and installed those new. pretty much followed the VM carb rebuild manual from this website to the letter.
I tried many different settings of both the air and fuel mixture screws. For the air mix screw, I mostly had it at one turn out from seated, but the bike seemed to respond better when it was turned even farther inwards, it would even run with the air screws completely seated, turned all the way in . That further made me suspect the bike is running extremely lean and has some sort of air leak problem, not drawing enough vacuum to suck the fuel. The fuel screw on the bottom of the carb, I have tried every interval in 1/2 turn increments from 1 turn out, to 4.5 turns out. Nothing seems to work.
Here are some of my questions - There are a few things I suspect could be the problem, but I'm really at a loss as to what I should do
1) the oil leak - people I have talked to say that if the problem is mechanical, IE a head gasket leak or valve problem, I wont be getting the proper vacuum from the cylinders - that being said, the oil leak is above the head gasket, and on top of that, I did a compression test and it seems to be fine. The manual says that your cylinders for this bike should run at minimum of 100psi. My test yielded these results:
cyl 1 - about 133psi, cyl 2 - 126psi, cyl 3 - 135, cyl 4 - 134psi
This would lead me to believe the head gasket is fine, but would that oil leak up by the valve cover still cause me to lose vacuum or something? the rate of this leak is about one drop every 3-5min or so while running
2) When reassembling the carburetors, I noticed that the joints between the carburetors did not all seal very well. In the "literature" online, I have seen these referred to as carburetor vents, joints, connectors, and nipples. They are essentially the fuel tubes that connect the carbs, allowing gas to flow between them. The one in the center, between carbs 2 and 3 is a T joint, and is where you connect the main fuel line from the gas tank.
The parts I have are old school, they have raised rubber ridges and not replaceable O rings, one of them was clearly replaced before I owned this bike, because it looks newer, and makes a snug fit between carbs 1 and 2. The central T joint one between carbs 2 and 3, as well as the last one between 3 and 4 have rather worn down rubber ridges, and dont seem to fit as snug
so I'm wondering if that could be the source of my leak? I have seen some posts about using gasket maker compound to build up these ridges, does anyone have any experience with that? I'd just buy some new ones but theyre a discontinued part, and none are currently for sale on ebay. Anybody know some newer compatible parts?
3) Air leaks on the Airbox side of the carburetors - from what I read on this site, people seem to agree that unless you have a well sealed airbox (for a bike with stock jets and pipes, which I believe mine has) you will not be getting the proper air mix. Other folks I have spoken to tell me that having absolutely perfect seals on the airbox end will not make or break the performance of the bike, and I dont know what to think.
Now the boots between my carbs and my airbox are certainly not new. It looks like a few of them have been replaced, but some of them are old, hard rubber that I know for a fact arent making a great seal. As far as the airbox itself goes, on the inside of the covers, it still has the original rubber strip probably from 1978, which I assume is probably not airtight anymore. all in all I can probably assume the airbox end of the carb system is not 100% airtight. All that being said, before my bike starting running poorly, I was using this airbox with the same carb boots that probably werent 100% sealed, and the bike ran totally fine.
after doing all this work on the thing, I have absolutely no idea where to go, and I figured I'd post my story and hope for some suggestions before I bring the old girl to a shop and drop the big bucks.
I need some expert advice here, so thanks in advance to any responses I receive.
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