When it's even colder outside, lately I am noticing a slight miss sometimes which I am sure is a lean condition. I usually start her up and drive right off so there are a few miles of cold running before the engine reaches operating temperature. I shut the choke off about as soon as I'm underway. Everything seems fine above 35 degrees, especially at any throttle opening above a steady cruise.
I last made the mixture adjustment when it was about 40 or 45 outside. It still gets that warm some days so I hessitate to go richer with the mixture screws, if I don't have to.
My question is how many degrees F is a mixture adjustment good for ? If I adjust to perfection at say, 40 degrees, will the carbs still work normally at say 20 degrees or 10 degrees ?
I'm talking some real numbers but I have not see anything less than 22 ... yet ... at a standstill. Windchill ? Welllll that's another story altogether.
At this point "little Suzy" runs great when warmed up except for after a bit of relaxed highway miles at 60-65 when it's below 30 degrees out. I can feel a slight almost non-existant weakening of the power. A slight miss that isn't really a miss at all. Almost like she's not getting quite enough fuel to the carbs. I have left the fuel shutoff "off" enough times to know exactly what that feels like. If I roll in just a tiny extra amount of throttle she smooths out and feels ok.
I'd like to be able to ride all Winter when it's dry outside regardless of the temperature. I don't want to have to tweak the mixture screws every other week. Is going to these extremes impossible due to carbs that cannot handle much temperature fluctuation without needing to ? HELP !
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