Bike ran great, carbs were recently balanced and tuned, then petcock fails.
Replaced petcock, bike now pops on deceleration with engine braking. Plugs also look very white.
I think I'm running lean. I have resealed the airbox and have good boots on both side of the carb. I'm sure there's no air leaks.
My guess is that the petcock was imperceptibly leaking excess fuel into the carb when it was tuned last at a shop. When the damn finally broke and it was apparent the petcock had failed, I replaced it and now the slow fuel leak that the carb was tuned with was fixed, leading to a lean running bike. Does that sound feasible or am I barking up the wrong tree?
Now, my proposed solution is to adjust a screw... but man is there some confusing terminology when it comes to carburetor screws. I have seen the terms "air screw, fuel screw, air/fuel screw, idle mixture screw, pilot screw". Searching the forum just leads to more synonyms for what I think are only two different screws, right?
Here's a picture: http://imgur.com/a/r7e51
I don't know what screw "A" is called. I know it's used to balance the carbs and I don't plan on adjusting that to solve this problem...but what's it called anyways?
Screw "B" I think is called the pilot screw. Is that the same thing as the fuel/air screw, sometimes just called the air screw, sometimes called the fuel screw, sometimes called the idle mixture screw?
So what I *think* I need to do is adjust screw "B" so I'm running a little richer.
This tutorial clearly states "Richen the mixture: rotate the pilot air/fuel screw counter-clockwise" http://members.dslextreme.com/users/...n_CV_Carbs.pdf
This tutorial clearly states "If the screw is turned in, it reduces the amount of air and richens the mixture" http://www.iwt.com.au/mikunicarb.htm
So which way do I turn it?
Initially, I think I want to count the turns it takes to lightly seat them then return back to where they just were so I have a reference point(hopefully that's between 1.5 to 2.5 turns right?). Then I'll turn each one half a turn in the richer direction(whatever that is), and ride around and see if that solves my Popping/PseudoBackfire problem. Rinse and repeat until that goes away then plug chop to see if everything looks good. I think I could use the "highest idle rpm" method here but I've tried that before with mixed results so I'm doing this one slow, steady, and make it easy to return back to the starting point.
Thanks for taking the time to read this.
-John
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