I recently purchased a fairly well maintained, but not run for 3 years (stabilizer in the tank) 1977 GS550. It currently will start and idle with the choke on, but even slightly turning the choke off will cause it to die. With the choke on, I can slowly increase the throttle and the rpms will increase, but if I quickly increase the throttle it will die.
I know I need to clean the carbs. I have them off the bike, and am going to spend an evening with the ultrasonic cleaner at my motorcycle club.
When I saw the bike listed, it was listed as not running. It had been sitting for three years with stabilizer in the tank. I contacted the seller and he said he could get it running. When I first inspected the bike, it started right up, and ran without choke, but it spewed gas from one of the carbs. Seller said he could resolve that issue. He replaced the gaskets on the float bowls. When I checked it out again, he couldn't get it to start. I bought it anyway, and had it towed home.
I determined that two cylinders weren't firing due to bad spark plugs. I replaced the plugs and am now left in my current state, where it will run on full choke only.
I'm hoping just disassembling and cleaning the carbs will get it going, and from what I've read here I'm going to do the valves too. I'm also thinking that I should install an in-line fuel filter between the petcock and fuel rail.
It currently has velocity stacks on it and an aftermarket 4-2 exhaust, but has supposedly been rejetted to compensate.
Ok, enough back story. Here are my questions.
- The service manual says NEVER TOUCH THOSE SCREWS ON THE BOTTOM OF THE CARBS. From my understanding, those are the fuel screws, and I'm aware that they are tuned specifically for each carb. I have gently screwed them all in and recorded how many turns it took, and then removed them and inspected them. They seem gunky and have sediment stuck on them. Is this likely part of my problem?
- Related: Upon removing the fuel tank, and shaking it around a bit, I can hear sediment sloshing around in the tank. As far as I can tell, it's not rusted up on the inside aside from a bit of oxidation right below the gas cap. What's the best way to remove said sediment, and, since this particular gas tank is kind of hard to see inside, how can I tell if it's rusty?
- If giving the carbs a good cleaning doesn't fix this, what else should I be looking at? Is there anything I need to be really careful about upon reassembling them?
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