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Why Won't You Start!!!
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Originally posted by Adler View PostI know! I need to do the valves... I've been procrastinating, I'm terrified I'll break something.
Anyhow, story of the bike.
After I got it from the OP, Changed the air-filter and did an oil-change and I cleaned the carbs... badly.
Didnt work, so I started learning on here.
Cleaned the carbs better, still no soak (couldnt find).
Now it worked but rather badly (high and not very reliable idle).
Bought some carb cleaner and soaked the carbs and changed the o-rings, also polished the exhaust. Now it wont even think of starting.Larry D
1980 GS450S
1981 GS450S
2003 Heritage Softtail
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Adler
Alright alright... lets get this ball rolling...
Is it a good assumption that these are not precise enough?
http://www.canadiantire.ca/AST/browse/4/Auto/AutoTools/GeneralAutomotiveTools/PRD~0256178P/9-piece%252BValve%252BTappet%252BGauge%252BSet.jsp?l ocale=en
These look better but they arent automotive specific...
http://www.canadiantire.ca/AST/browse/6/Tools/SpecialtyTools/MechanicsSpecialtyTools/PRD~0581246P/3-in.%252BLeaf%252BFeeler%252BGauge.jsp?locale=en
Strongly considering these, but that means i have to wait 3 weeks for delivery....
Last edited by Guest; 09-14-2010, 04:19 PM.
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Any decent car accessory / tool store should carry feeler gauges and they shouldn't cost much (a few $s). Make sure you get a metric set - the maths is just so much easier.....
Ideally you should get a set that goes down to 0.03mm though the cheaper sets usually only go down to 0.04mm. The latter will be fine - you could end up running with slightly large clearances but this is fine (around 0.1mm is about as high as you should aim and will be achievable - in theory with the cheaper gauges 0.09mm is as wide as you need go). The book of words says 0.03mm to 0.08mm.79 GS1000S
79 GS1000S (another one)
80 GSX750
80 GS550
80 CB650 cafe racer
75 PC50 - the one with OHV and pedals...
75 TS100 - being ridden (suicidally) by my father
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Adler
Originally posted by hampshirehog View PostAny decent car accessory / tool store should carry feeler gauges and they shouldn't cost much (a few $s). .
Im going to buy these, theyre on sale and look wonderful!
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Ya know this valve adjustment thing really has me baffled. My 850 valves were wayyyy tight and not only did it start really easy but it also ran very good. As a matter of fact all of em were too tight for the feelers. Granted they were loose enough to rotate the bucket but every single one of em were out of spec.
Not to argue, the valves need adjusted but how dang tight do they need to be for the bike not to start?
The 850 is now within spec and other than a little more noise I cant tell a dang difference.
Seems as long as you can rotate the bucket then the valve arent stuck open, the bike should run.Last edited by Octain; 09-14-2010, 05:30 PM.sigpic
82 GS850
78 GS1000
04 HD Fatboy
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I'm arriving late to this , but I need an Adler summary.
1/ first carb cleaning- no good but bike still ran?
2/second carb cleaning- not better but bike still ran?
3/ bought carb cleaner, soak carbs, changed o-rings, but now it won't start?
I'm sure it needs a valve adjustment, but why doesn't it start? Are your plug wires on correctly? doublecheck,cuz this is easy to do in haste.1981 gs650L
"We are all born ignorant, but you have to work hard to stay stupid" Ben Franklin
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Adler
Originally posted by tom203 View PostI'm arriving late to this , but I need an Adler summary.
1/ first carb cleaning- no good but bike still ran?
2/second carb cleaning- not better but bike still ran?
3/ bought carb cleaner, soak carbs, changed o-rings, but now it won't start?
I'm sure it needs a valve adjustment, but why doesn't it start? Are your plug wires on correctly? doublecheck,cuz this is easy to do in haste.
I thought about the plug wires being wrong but then it wouldnt run on starter fluid would it?
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No tank... everything exposed... pull all the plug wires, pull the plugs and make sure they are damp. Now put fresh plugs, recheck the plug wires carefully. Choke the snot out of it and don't touch that throttle... After that doesn't work, check the dang valves. When you are done with the valves, let us know how it runs... We are rooting for you...
Curtsigpic'85 GS1150 1428 14-1 200+hp Hang On
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Originally posted by Adler View Post
I thought about the plug wires being wrong but then it wouldnt run on starter fluid would it?1981 gs650L
"We are all born ignorant, but you have to work hard to stay stupid" Ben Franklin
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Adler
Alrighty guys,
I finally checked my valves and here is what I found;
[CODE]
Cylinder Shim In Shim Ex Clearance In Clearance Ex
1 2.70 2.67 <0.0015 0.0025
2 2.70 2.70 0.0025 0.0025
3 2.70 2.75 <0.0015 <0.0015
4 2.65 2.70 <0.0015 0.0015
[/CODE]I realize that I mixed metric and imperial measurements here.
The point is ALL the buckets turned freely so I would think that these measurements are not far enough off of spec to cause my no-start condition (I'd be delighted to be wrong). Of course, I'll still change the shims to make them all perfect but in the meantime I'd like to figure out why its not starting!
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BassCliff
Hi,
The spec in inches is .001-.003. It seems half of your valves are too tight and one more is at minimum. (I find it easier to measure in millimeters, .03-.08).
Do you have the airbox installed?
Since it catches with starter fluid but then dies, it seems like a fuel issue. If the airbox is not installed then you could be running too lean.
Thank you for your indulgence,
BassCliffLast edited by Guest; 10-04-2010, 10:53 PM.
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Adler
Originally posted by BassCliff View PostHi,
The spec in inches is .001-.003. It seems half of your valves are too tight and one more is at minimum. (I find it easier to measure in millimeters, .03-.08).
Do you have the airbox installed?
Since it catches with starter fluid but then die, it seems like a fuel issue. If the airbox is not installed then you could be running too lean.
Thank you for your indulgence,
BassCliff
Puzzling indeed... When I have more time later this week I may switch the carbs for a spare set I have to see if that will do it.
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It still amazes me how many times advise will be ignored/rejected because "it can't possibly be that because ..."
Tight valves are notorious for causing hard starting on cold engines. Part of the reason is that the valve will be held open later due to the tight clearance. This allows some of the mixture that is in the cylinder to be pushed out the intake valve, back through the carb. The carb does not care which way air is moving, it sees moving air, more fuel is added. Moments later, the piston is going back down, the valve is open, air goes back through the carb AGAIN, picking up even more fuel. To add insult to injury, the "choke" is probably set, making the mixture far to rich to even think of burning.
This only happens when the engine is cold because of metal expansion. The head expands as it warms up and clearance from the cams to the valves will increase a bit. Hard to say just how much, but it must be enough to help the valve timing and starting problems.
How tight do they have to be to cause this hard starting? I have not been able to measure that point, as it is smaller than the thinnest feeler in any set I have ever owned. The last time I had a bike with those hard-starting symptoms, I don't remember if the buckets could be rotated or not.
Bottom line: adjust the valves. Keep them well-adjusted. Record your results (see the bottom of my sig).
In the first four hours after you asked the first question, valve adjustment was discussed more than any other topic.
In fact, it was mentioned just four minutes after the question.
However, nobody mentioned one other tip: THROW THE STARTING FLUID AWAY.
If the bike won't start, fix the problem, don't thow "band-aids" at it.
.sigpic
mine: 2000 Honda GoldWing GL1500SE and 1980 GS850G'K' "Junior"
hers: 1982 GS850GL - "Angel" and 1969 Suzuki T250 Scrambler
#1 son: 1986 Yamaha Venture Royale 1300 and 1982 GS650GL "Rat Bagger"
#2 son: 1980 GS1000G
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Siblings and Spouses
Mom's first ride
Want a copy of my valve adjust spreadsheet for your 2-valve per cylinder engine? Send me an e-mail request (not a PM)
(Click on my username in the upper-left corner for e-mail info.)
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Adler
Thanks Steve, I hope you're right and its just the valves, I just assumed that if the valves werent too far off I would at least be getting SOME action out of the engine. I knew from the start the valves were a suspect but I also knew they would take me the longest to fix and I definitely didnt want to find it wasn't the valves causing the issues (though I'd do them anyways, I know how these bikes are finicky like that).
As to the starting fluid, I would never use it to start the bike! It is just a diagnostic tool, if it burns with the starter fluid then I doubt the problem is electrical in nature.
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