I am working on an 82' GS650 GL-Z. I am not the owner of the motorcycle but I am working on it for a friend basically for the cost of parts.
I have posted here a few times and received useful advise in diagnosing a short in the kill switch housing area.
This is my situation: I am at a loss for why this bike will not run. Every time I do something, I have the hope that it will fix whatever of the big 4 (air, compression, fuel, spark) the bike is missing to run. Here are the details of what has been done recently by me:
- Valve clearance measurement & adjustment, all now within spec.
- Re-wiring of kill switch to fix a short caused by wire crushed against handlebars.
- New air filter
- Complete carb removal and dismantling, dipped all carburetors minus rubber & plastic bits, blew out all passages with compressed air, reassembled with new O-rings from cycleorings.com. Mixture screws are roughly 2 turns out and butterfly valves are at roughly the same spot. Carbs are ready to be balanced with vacuum gauges assuming the bike would actually run...
- New intake boot O-rings from cycleorings.com
- Most recently, the coil relay modification. I was hesitant to do this but the voltage at my coils was low. Now voltage is upwards of 10v.
Yesterday is when I reinstalled the carburetors. I was sure that the dipping and new O-rings would solve my problems. It ran, or should I say didn't run just as before. I already had the parts for the coil relay modification so I went ahead and did that. It seemed to work for what is supposed to do, which of course is to increase voltage at the coils. The bike still will not start.
The bike will run for about 3 seconds on starting fluid, on 2 cylinders. Cylinders 1 and 3 before carb work, now cylinders 2 and 4 (maybe, hard to tell).
Something I did notice is that the carb slides on 1 and 4 were kind of binding a little, getting stuck. I oiled them and that seemed to help. Maybe the 25 year old slide springs are tired? I'm not sure, this could be the problem or it could be trivial.
I basically went through the process of elimination with this bike, and the first time I pulled the carbs I did not dip them or install new O-rings...hence my doing it again a week ago to do it the right, recommended way.
Any advise for me? I really want to get this thing running so I don't have to truck a non-running bike back to the owner with a sense of failure and a lot of wasted time (although it has been a learning experience, knowledge I can apply to my own kz900)
Comment