I became the proud owner of a 1981 GS750L last fall. Don't have much history on the bike other than the PO's awareness of charging problems. He also laid the bike down once to avoid hitting a car that pulled out in front of him. I purchased the bike from him shortly thereafter (he moved to CA and didn't want to take it) and put ~300 miles on it, starting it with starter fluid and either jump-starting off my car battery or push starting it down my street.
Once it got cold outside I decided to knock out as much maintenance as I could, assuming that nothing had been done in the last 20 years since I didn't know the bike's history. Here's what I did:
1. Adjusted valve clearances
2. Disassembled carbs completely, dipped in Berryman's for 24 hours apiece, rebuilt (with new o-rings of course) and bench synced carbs
3. Replaced all rubber tubes between airbox/carb/engine
4. Replaced boots (couplers, whatever they're called) at the exhaust joints (i know there still isn't a perfect seal at one joint - either from the PO's wreck or before that the tab on the end of one exhaust tube at the joint was bent badly and preventing the clamp from fitting around the tube so i broke it off)
5. New sealed battery (charged and verified holding charge)
6. Installed brand new Stator & R/R
7. Installed Coil Relay Mod
After I put everything back together, the bike was hard to start. I used jumper cables to connect battery to my car battery to avoid draining the new battery and still took about 5 minutes of turning the engine over before it finally caught. Idled ~2000 RPM for a minute or two, and idle then began increasing slowly. I turned it off, then started it easily and rode around the block to warm up a bit more. In about 2 minutes of riding the idle rose to ~4000 RPM. I'm pretty sure the increasing idle is a result of air intake leak - probably didn't get one of the new hoses connected completely. But that's not the main problem I'm having.
After reading lots in this forum, decided the hard cold start may be a result of incorrect valve adjustment (it was my first time doing it), so I adjusted clearances again, this time to just over .005" to eliminate possibility of tight valves (they measured around .004" when I opened up to adjust the second time).
After re-assembling, the engine wouldn't turn over, even attached to my car battery or even with me trying to turn the 19mm ignition bolt manually with a wrench. The bolt will turn about 180 degrees in either direction and then it's litterally jammed. With all my weight on the wrench it wouldn't go any farther. Seemed weird considering I didn't have a problem turning the engine when I was adjusting the valves the day prior. But after trying to start the engine for about 10 minutes with the starter button, it finally started to turn over a few times and did so for about 5 minutes with no luck actually starting. I even sprayed starter fluid into the airbox in hope that it would help the engine catch but it didn't help. After a while the engine started displaying the previous behavior of only turning 180 degrees before stopping.
I did encounter a little hiccup while adjusting valves the second time - i dropped my tappet clearance gauge into the middle of the engine (where the cam chain is) and it dropped all the way to the bottom. Took 2 hours to fish it out with a tool I fashioned out of a clothes hanger.
My two main questions:
What could I have messed up adjusting valve clearances that would cause the engine to not turn over anymore, even manually? Can too much clearance cause this problem?
What would cause the engine to still have problems cold starting? I expectred it to start up in the 5 minutes the engine was actually turning over completely. Mixture screws (which I turned anywhere from 1 1/4 turns out to 3 turns out while trying to start this last time)? Improperly synced carbs (I have Carbtune but haven't used it yet)? I know both are issues since I never had the bike running long enough to address either but how can I fix either if I can't get the engine to run? I took float bowls off carbs and all were full of fuel so I don't think it's a fuel line problem.
We're getting 4-5 really nice days a week here in Kansas now, and each day breaks my heart a little more. Any advice would be awesome!
Chuck
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