I'm looking for some technical info and this place seems to have a technical knowledge far beyond most other forums, so I appreciate your input and hope you don't mind my asking a question about a new (non-GS?) bike.
I'm balancing my throttle bodies to smooth out some vibration. I did a first pass and it helped a lot, but then I started to think about what I actually did. "Internet Wisdom" says to do the synchronization at ~4,000 rpm, despite the manuals saying to go just above idle. The 'Wisdom' is that you should balance the throttle where you are more likely to be using it.
I haven't seen a schematic (parts diagram doesn't show details) but I have 2 thoughts about this:
1) It could be a system where the adjustment screw moves the position of the butterfly on the shaft. In that case, adjusting near idle gives you more 'resolution' where a small adjustment has a bigger effect, since the butterfly is mostly closed and the flow area is small. In this case, with part geometry within tolerance, all the butterflies would be set to the same angle/position on the main shaft so theoretically they should still be open the same amount at higher RPM.
2) Maybe there is some additional air circuit that is being adjusted. In this case, since its a very small screw in comparison to the overall butterfly, it would again have very low resolution unless measured when the butterfly is nearly closed. In this case, some fine adjustment of some small air circuit would probably be 'in the noise' at high rpm where butterfly position would be dominating.
Ok there's a 3) These new bikes have a secondary throttle valve and I bet "Internet Wisdom" doesn't really know specifically when they are actuated, and even if they did, doesn't have a good way of controlling RPM to just below that point.
Am I missing something? And how do these things work?
Here's a pic of the GSX-S1000 throttle bodies. You can see the screw used for synchronization on the bottom side - a brass screw inside a long port that leads to the side of each throttle body.
Here's a link to the parts diagram:throttle body.jpg
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