I parked it and let it sit for about 1.5 hours, went back out and there was a steady drip of gas coming from the hose that connects to the air box (not the box that has the filter but the one that is connected to the carbs), enough to leave a puddle about 2 X 1 feet! Took it for another ride and it was slipping when full or close to full throttle.
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first real ride and problems, HELP!
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suzu650
first real ride and problems, HELP!
Went for a 30 minute ride this afternoon and the first thing I noticed was in all gears if I hammered on it or got even close to it, the bike would just rev up, but then would slip back in to gear when I let off and would continue accelerating when I rode normally. It seems that the last 10 minutes or so that I rode it was riding normal when I floored it.
I parked it and let it sit for about 1.5 hours, went back out and there was a steady drip of gas coming from the hose that connects to the air box (not the box that has the filter but the one that is connected to the carbs), enough to leave a puddle about 2 X 1 feet! Took it for another ride and it was slipping when full or close to full throttle.
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suzu650
Just checked to see if it had leaked at all after the second ride. only a very small puddle about the size of the bottom of a coffee mug and was not dripping when I went out there.
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BassCliff
Hi,
Your clutch is slipping and you probably have gas in your crankcase oil now. Not good. Do not ride your bike until you are certain that you have 100% oil in your crankcase and there is no gasoline in there diluting your oil.
You clutch may just need some adjustment. Or your clutch plates may just need to be cleaned up, fibers roughed up a bit. You may need new clutch springs. You won't know until you've changed your oil and made some adjustments. If the adjustments don't work you'll have to open up your clutch and inspect the plates and springs. Your manual will have wear specifications. There's a little clutch information on my website that will give you an idea of what you're looking at. There is information about leaking carbs too. Keep us informed.
Thank you for your indulgence,
BassCliff
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Forum LongTimerGSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter
Super Site Supporter- Mar 2006
- 35701
- Torrance, CA
Please tell us what kind of maintenance you have performed on the bike?Ed
To measure is to know.
Mikuni O-ring Kits For Sale...https://www.thegsresources.com/_foru...ts#post1703182
Top Newbie Mistakes thread...http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=171846
Carb rebuild tutorial...https://gsarchive.bwringer.com/mtsac...d_Tutorial.pdf
KZ750E Rebuild Thread...http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...0-Resurrection
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suzu650
Its my 83 650g. I changed the oil and plugs, sprayed carb cleaner in carbs, seafoamed, and have been messing with the clutch cable lately. So I did NOTHING major to it.
I figured the clutch was just slipping as it is not working %100 perfect, but the gas puddle was beyond me.
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suzu650
Originally posted by BassCliff View PostHi,
Your clutch is slipping and you probably have gas in your crankcase oil now. Not good. Do not ride your bike until you are certain that you have 100% oil in your crankcase and there is no gasoline in there diluting your oil.
BassCliff
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BassCliff
Originally posted by suzu650 View PostHow does this happen? what caused it? what is the problem and the solution?
The causes for leaky carbs are discussed on my website. No need to retype them here. Have you properly cleaned and rebuilt your carbs?
Thank you for your indulgence,
BassCliff
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LarryA_Texas
clutch
Originally posted by suzu650 View PostHow does this happen? what caused it? what is the problem and the solution?
In either case, the solution is replacement. Drain the oil...you have to do that anyway to get to the clutch...and find out why your petcock is leaking gas. (there is a bad 0-ring or diaphragm inside the petcock. ) Then find out why that gas is getting into the airbox. You most likely have bad o-rings in the fuel inlet float valves. Replace all the carb o-rings while you're at it (See cycle o-rings in Cliff's mega welcome) and then replace the oil with fresh oil.
Easy.
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suzu650
Originally posted by BassCliff View PostHi,
The causes for leaky carbs are discussed on my website. No need to retype them here. Have you properly cleaned and rebuilt your carbs?
Thank you for your indulgence,
BassCliff
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spwalker09
Originally posted by suzu650 View PostI have not. I could take them off and give them a nice dip, but I would not know where to begin with rebuilding them. From the sounds of your site, I am going to have to bring my bike to a shop as I am at school with VERY limited tools. What a pain and huge waste of $$$$$$
(and I'm in school right now too...not an excuse! )
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TitanNeil
Had the bike been sitting for a very long time before this latest ride? Did the clutch stop slipping near the end of the ride when the bike was fully warmed up?
Don't get discouraged - at least you are riding! The problem of the gas leak is that your fuel petcock (shutoff) is letting gas go to the carbs after the engine has stopped running - there is a vacuum diaphragm in the petcock that is supposed to shut this off when there is no vacuum (vaccum is produced when engine is turning). Could the petcock lever have been in the wrong position, like Prime? That would let gas through at all times. If it was on On, that would mean the diaphragm mechanism was stuck open.
How does the bike run normally? Pretty good, no roughness? If it ran fine that would probably mean the carbs are, well, at least clean enough to run!
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suzu650
Originally posted by TitanNeil View PostHad the bike been sitting for a very long time before this latest ride? Did the clutch stop slipping near the end of the ride when the bike was fully warmed up?
Don't get discouraged - at least you are riding! The problem of the gas leak is that your fuel petcock (shutoff) is letting gas go to the carbs after the engine has stopped running - there is a vacuum diaphragm in the petcock that is supposed to shut this off when there is no vacuum (vaccum is produced when engine is turning). Could the petcock lever have been in the wrong position, like Prime? That would let gas through at all times. If it was on On, that would mean the diaphragm mechanism was stuck open.
How does the bike run normally? Pretty good, no roughness? If it ran fine that would probably mean the carbs are, well, at least clean enough to run!
I dont know how it runs normally, I got it just a few months ago and just got my license, so this was the first ride
The petcock lever was in the ON position.
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BassCliff
Originally posted by suzu650 View PostI have not. I could take them off and give them a nice dip, but I would not know where to begin with rebuilding them. From the sounds of your site, I am going to have to bring my bike to a shop as I am at school with VERY limited tools. What a pain and huge waste of $$$$$$
You are riding a motorcycle that's nearly 30 years old. It's going to need some TLC to restore it to its former reliable condition. There's a link to the Carb Rebuild Series on the homepage of GSR and a copy on my website. Get an inexpensive set of carb O-rings from Robert Barr, some carb dip, and have a go at it. It's all in your "mega-welcome". Keep us informed.
Thank you for your indulgence,
BassCliff
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979roadrunner
Suzu 650 I know how you feel regarding the carb rebuild, I was intimidated at first too, but take my word for it as a mechanic (auto) of some year's experience, looked at individually, motorcycle carbs are SIMPLE compared to an automotive one.
The only sort of PITA part, is getting them out to rebuild. ( my old GN400 was great in this regard, it was a single, and I could actually do a halfway carb cleaning by the side of the road, without even removing the carb, good enough to get me home)
Too bad the GS is an inline 4 (but not too bad)
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