I put the bike on the center stand and realized the oil level was too high. Once I shook the bike, I realized the oil was way too liquidy (I made that word up). I've dealt with overflowing carbs before. The first time (last summer), I replaced the float valve needles but forgot to tighten down one of the float valve seats. Off came the carbs again to tighten the seat. I did have to rig up some clear tubes in the bowl drain to measure fuel height but once that was set, I had no problems.
I took the carbs off when I broke the motor down. I didn't touch them at all and just reinstalled after the motor was back together. I'm hoping the issue this time is something as simple as a stuck float. I did not tap the bowls while the carbs were on the bike since I never ran it after noticing the fuel overflowing. I've already pulled the carbs and sprayed out the valve seats in case some debris found its when in there. My dilemma is whether to change the oil first and clean up the leaks before trying out the carbs again. I'd hate to fill it with fresh oil only to have the carbs overflow again.
As I'm typing this, I'm realizing $15 in oil isn't worth risking 5 months and $300 of work on the motor. So oil change first, then test out the carbs.
Comment