The bike is getting pretty hard to start. Usually if I go out and hold the choke all the way on, it will start briefly but die very quickly. I cannot rev it up either; if I do so it will try to die more quickly.
I can get it to start on ether generally. But I can tell that it isn't running on all 4 cylinders at first. The other day I got it running and was on the highway and noticed that I didn't have the power I normally do. I pulled the clutch and revved it up real high (near redline) a couple times and then it was like the last cylinder came "on line". Then I had all the power I should.
I figured that for whatever reason the one cylinder wasn't working when I started up but it started firing when the rest warmed up a bit.
I pulled the four plugs a few hours after a failed start attempt (didn't have time to mess with ether and such) and found that three looked pretty good, dry, light brown etc while number 1 was wet and smelled gassy.
I was thinking that maybe the problem was that it was getting cooler and bought a set of the "hotter" plugs mentioned in the manual. I stuck one in #1 and the bike seemed to start better, though it might have just been because it wasn't fouled yet. I pulled the spark plug wire while it was running to verify that spark was getting there. (I was zapped when it was off the plug and the engine bogged as that plug stopped firing.) So that means electricity is getting to it.
What I'm wondering is if it would hurt to run the hotter plug now since the temps are cooling. (I live in Kansas.) I do some highway riding and the manual did mention that generally in higher speed riding the cooler plugs would be preferable to avoid engine overheating. But maybe this is counterbalanced by the cooler weather. (highs in the mid 70s now.
Is there anything else to look for? Why would this one plug be fouling?
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