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    #16
    Originally posted by koolaid_kid View Post
    You have to fix that. You must reshim until you can measure clearances within tolerance. There is no other choice.
    I'm at a loss as to why my shims are exceeding tolerance like this, I've never touched them before...

    How do I determine which shims I'll need, seeing as I have no frame of reference to start with? Should I just order a few random shims and play it as I go?

    Even though my compression is back to normal, I still need to reshim?

    ... I keep falling back to WHY are they oversized, I know they've never been replaced, what in the world is going on here?

    ----
    Just saw the prices for a shim kit! $200?! Whyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy
    Last edited by Guest; 10-17-2013, 06:45 AM.

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      #17
      First, join the shim club here. My bike never used shims, so I don't have a link, but someone here will have one. Not sure how it works, but it has to be way cheaper than purchasing new shims.
      Second, if there is zero clearance, pull that shim, measure it with your micrometer or caliper, and install one two sizes thinner. Measure clearance again, and go from there.
      AFA why they change, that is what happens over time. That is why you should shim to the looser end of the tolerance when you are adjusting clearances.

      Comment


        #18
        Just a suggestion regarding your valve clearance issue: are you using the correct Suzuki factory method for turning the cam to a specific position and then measuring valve clearance on two valves, or just rotating cam so that the lobe is pointing up for each valve you measure?

        Although small, the two different procedures give different results.
        1981 GS850G "Blue Magic" (Bike Of The Month April 2009)

        1981 GS1000G "Leo" (Bike Of The Month August 2023)

        Comment


          #19
          Originally posted by 2BRacing View Post
          Just a suggestion regarding your valve clearance issue: are you using the correct Suzuki factory method for turning the cam to a specific position and then measuring valve clearance on two valves, or just rotating cam so that the lobe is pointing up for each valve you measure?

          Although small, the two different procedures give different results.
          Yessir, for this I followed my manual exactly. It shows the lobe pointing in a specific direction parallel to gasket surface / top of the engine.

          Originally posted by koolaid_kid View Post
          First, join the shim club here. My bike never used shims, so I don't have a link, but someone here will have one. Not sure how it works, but it has to be way cheaper than purchasing new shims.
          Second, if there is zero clearance, pull that shim, measure it with your micrometer or caliper, and install one two sizes thinner. Measure clearance again, and go from there.
          AFA why they change, that is what happens over time. That is why you should shim to the looser end of the tolerance when you are adjusting clearances.
          Ah... All righty, so I've gotta play it as I go... that's what I was afraid of. I'll start looking into the shim club then, thank you for the info!

          Just for git n shiggles, what would happen if I left the valves as they are? Would they eventually wear into tolerance areas? Would this damage anything? Now that compression is back up to 140's do I really need to worry about it?

          I know it seems like I'm just trying to hedge the work and cost - because I am... If I can legitimately get by without having to buy new shims, it wouldn't hurt my feelings any. If this is indeed necessary, I'll stop dicking around and just get it over with. I just am curious to know what the immediate / long term side effects this would have on my performance.

          Comment


            #20
            If you do not adjust your valves you will burn your valves and have to do a top end rebuild. You do not want to do that.
            Here is the thread about the shim club: http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=122394

            Comment


              #21
              Originally posted by Call Me Ahab View Post
              I know it seems like I'm just trying to hedge the work and cost - because I am... If I can legitimately get by without having to buy new shims, it wouldn't hurt my feelings any. If this is indeed necessary, I'll stop dicking around and just get it over with. I just am curious to know what the immediate / long term side effects this would have on my performance.
              134 posts and it appears that you have never looked through your megawelcome

              Read this. If you read it before, print it out and check off the items as you go

              1A) (NEW) Trying to diagnose running problems on a bike with an unknown maintenance history. Common maintenance items like clean carbs, properly adjusted valves, no air leaks in the intake system (airbox, carb boots), a clean gas tank (no rust), and a properly functioning petcock are 100% mandatory for the bike to run properly.


              Looks like 1,3.7,9 and 10 should be on your agenda. And don't forget 13 and 15
              1978 GS 1000 (since new)
              1979 GS 1000 (The Fridge, superbike replica project)
              1978 GS 1000 (parts)
              1981 GS 850 (anyone want a project?)
              1981 GPZ 550 (backroad screamer)
              1970 450 Mk IIID (THUMP!)
              2007 DRz 400S
              1999 ATK 490ES
              1994 DR 350SES

              Comment


                #22
                If you refuse to take care of your valves your bike will not take care of you. Adjust them now using the procedures found on Basscliff's site (http://members.dslextreme.com/users/...lve_adjust.pdf). The Shim Club is listed in the GS Services section and run by GhostGS1 - great guy to work with. Email, don't PM, Steve for his spreadsheet
                Cowboy Up or Quit. - Run Free Lou and Rest in Peace

                1981 GS550T - My First
                1981 GS550L - My Eldest Daughter's - Now Sold
                2007 GSF1250SA Bandit - My touring bike

                Sit tall in the saddle Hold your head up high
                Keep your eyes fixed where the trail meets the sky and live like you ain't afraid to die
                and don't be scared, just enjoy your ride - Chris Ledoux, "The Ride"

                Comment


                  #23
                  Originally posted by Big T View Post
                  134 posts and it appears that you have never looked through your megawelcome

                  Read this. If you read it before, print it out and check off the items as you go

                  1A) (NEW) Trying to diagnose running problems on a bike with an unknown maintenance history. Common maintenance items like clean carbs, properly adjusted valves, no air leaks in the intake system (airbox, carb boots), a clean gas tank (no rust), and a properly functioning petcock are 100% mandatory for the bike to run properly.


                  Looks like 1,3.7,9 and 10 should be on your agenda. And don't forget 13 and 15
                  1A) (NEW) Trying to diagnose running problems on a bike with an unknown maintenance history is an exercise in futility until a baseline is established through proper maintenance. Things like clean carbs, properly adjusted valves, sealed intake system (airbox, carb boots), a clean gas tank (no rust), and a properly functioning petcock are 100% mandatory for the bike to run properly. It's best to perform all the bikes maintenance when you first get the bike, and then if problems show up you will know what the problem is not.

                  New gas tank, sealed; rebuilt airbox; valves lapped; piston rings replaced and filed to tolerance; petcock checked and working just fine.

                  I put off the valves and the boots because I don't have several hundred dollars laying around to throw into the wind without just cause. Now that it is a necessity, I can start putting money aside. I have the new boots and o-rings, and plan on installing these tonight.

                  1B) Incomplete carb cleaning. A proper carb cleaning requires a full tear down, soaking the parts in carb dip, and reassembly with fresh O-rings (cycleorings.com). Pilot jets, choke tubes, and pilot circuit passages in particular need a proper cleaning before the bike will run right. Even if the bike seems to run right, if the O-rings are original they are sure to be hard and brittle thus problems could be right around the corner. This is a link to a carb tutorial that you may find useful... http://www.mtsac.edu/~cliff/storage/...d_Tutorial.pdf

                  Done, quite thoroughly. Replaced all o-rings, one tee, and dipped and even used the 'special tool' called for cleaning the tiny orifices. Replaced one choke plunger and one idle mixture screw.


                  3) Not adjusting the valves. The valves tighten with mileage, and once all the clearance is gone the valves hang open and burn. Not good. If you wait for your bike to misbehave before performing this critical maintenance, you may damage the engine. If your valves have no clearance, you will need a thin checking shim in order to properly calculate the needed shims for your engine.

                  Yeah, working on that now.

                  7) Waiting for the charging system to fail, instead of cleaning up the old wiring. Many a battery have been boiled dry after the grounds corrode. Running a dedicated ground to the battery, or a solid frame attachment point, is strongly advised. Suzuki also botched the stator wiring by routing one leg up to the now discontinued head lamp switch. This needless wire path often overheats and damages the harness in the process. Do yourself a favor and rewire your charging system: run the stator wires directly into the R/R, make sure your R/R has a solid battery or frame ground point, and run the positive (power) R/R output either straight to the battery (with 20A fuse in-line) or though the regular fuse block after you check for resistance in the circuit and repair as needed.


                  Oh I've most certainly cleaned up my wiring system and connectors, I just didn't follow through with the mods involving relays. When I did this I wanted to keep to original specs as much as possible. Now that I'm more comfortable with altering my electrical system, I'm evaluating my options.

                  No, I have not yet rewired the R/R. I have attached 2 additional grounds. One from battery to frame, and one from frame to electrical panel.

                  9) Search out the information about your upcoming wrenching tasks before going off unprepared and possibly damaging something. Search using "Advanced Search" and then click "Titles Only" to quickly hone in on the topic at hand. Almost every possible question a newbie could ask have already been answered. For example: there are tons of threads on how to avoid broken exhaust bolts and float posts. Sadly, most newbies learn these tricks AFTER they damage their bike.

                  I'm familiar with the search function, thank you.

                  10) Buying a 30 year old motorcycle because it was cheap without any mechanical knowledge and no interest in learning. Paying a shop to work on your 30 year old motorcycle is not advised unless you have lots of money to spend and know for a fact that they are trustworthy.


                  I purchased my bike with a decent background in mechanics, just not motorcycles. My work usually centered on Mobil Drill rigs, geoprobes, AMS power probes, hydraulic systems- that sort of thing. I bought the bike, and indeed a second bike for the sole purpose of learning to wrench on bikes. We all start somewhere. If I wanted to **** away my time and money there are surely many better ways to do it. I may be young but I've been working on and with machinery since I was 15, until the company I worked for went under in 2011.

                  As far as maintenance history, the fellow who sold it to me just changed the oil, filters, bulbs, whatever happened to go wrong. In other words, he didn't replace gaskets, didn't want to get too deep into it because he didn't know how, and didn't want to. He didn't know anything about its maintenance history before he got ahold of it.

                  And finally, I've benefited a great deal from Basscliff's website and his accumulation of information and guides, I'm actually working through several of these right now. As always, I appreciate assistance, but not when somebody leaps to the assumption that I don't give a goddamn about what I'm doing, or that I'm too stupid to follow ****ing directions. I had questions, I had an open thread already, so I asked them. And for the record, I didn't argue about the advice given - I asked for clarification and reasoning for performing a given task.

                  15) Getting really nice and intoxicated and decide to fix some things on your bike... then waking up the next day and hop on your bike with some unfamiliar sounds, if it starts at all!

                  I like this 15 better.

                  Originally posted by koolaid_kid View Post
                  If you do not adjust your valves you will burn your valves and have to do a top end rebuild. You do not want to do that.
                  Here is the thread about the shim club: http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=122394
                  Thanks, I actually saw a notice in another thread about this earlier - I'm already considering which shim to order as my baseline. I'm thinking 2.50 or 2.55. Since I have a few that are within the .03 - .05 range, I'm guessing they can't be too off right now. We'll see what happens.

                  I'll email the fellows about the shim club tonight and begin the first trade. Hopefully that 2.50 does the trick, I can't afford to waste too much time here. I'll get it done right, but I'm not confident that my luck will hold at this point.

                  Originally posted by cowboyup3371 View Post
                  If you refuse to take care of your valves your bike will not take care of you. Adjust them now using the procedures found on Basscliff's site (http://members.dslextreme.com/users/...lve_adjust.pdf). The Shim Club is listed in the GS Services section and run by GhostGS1 - great guy to work with. Email, don't PM, Steve for his spreadsheet

                  Indeed, I have a copy of the spreadsheet from when I first ripped the gs1000 apart. Steve was a huge help, very knowledgeable fellow.

                  Comment


                    #24
                    I don't know how the shim club works, but I suggest you get a range of shims at the start. Get more than you need, rather than just enough. That way you can do it only once, rather than having to go back and ask for more if you find you need them.
                    Best of luck.

                    Comment


                      #25
                      To use the shim club, you have to send shims to get shims back. And you can't turn the engine without shims in all buckets. So unless you have some spares, you can't pull out all of your existing shims unless you want to spend months doing one at a time. Some people say you can use coins or other spacers temporarily but I'm leery of placing anything that's not machined perfectly flat under the cams. YMMV, however.

                      So what you could do is this: order one relatively thin shim from a source like Z1 Enterprises (2.30mm is the smallest I see there). This will give you plenty of space to accurately measure the clearance, so you don't have to guess whether to go down one size or two. Work your way through all of the valves. If you do the measurements and math right, then you have a list of exactly which shims you need to buy with no guessing involved.
                      Charles
                      --
                      1979 Suzuki GS850G

                      Read BassCliff's GSR Greeting and Mega-Welcome!

                      Comment


                        #26
                        You can also BUY a shim from the club, and I think that there have been cases where the club will front you a shim. I don't know if the club has any thin ones as it's been a long time.

                        The member you need to contact is Ghostgs1:

                        If you sell parts or provide services for GS series motorcycles, place a description of it in this forum.
                        '83 GS650G
                        '83 GS550es (didn't like the colours in the 80's, but they've grown on me)

                        Comment


                          #27
                          Originally posted by koolaid_kid View Post
                          Get more than you need, rather than just enough. That way you can do it only once, rather than having to go back and ask for more if you find you need them.
                          Best of luck.
                          Fair enough, I'll have to talk to my Ghost about that, thanks!

                          Originally posted by eil View Post
                          Some people say you can use coins or other spacers temporarily but I'm leery of placing anything that's not machined perfectly flat under the cams. YMMV, however.

                          So what you could do is this: order one relatively thin shim from a source like Z1 Enterprises (2.30mm is the smallest I see there). This will give you plenty of space to accurately measure the clearance, so you don't have to guess whether to go down one size or two. Work your way through all of the valves. If you do the measurements and math right, then you have a list of exactly which shims you need to buy with no guessing involved.
                          Fair enough, that sounds like a plan then - I'll go ahead and order one today.
                          Again, I'll need to talk to Ghost about his process.

                          Originally posted by BigD_83 View Post
                          You can also BUY a shim from the club, and I think that there have been cases where the club will front you a shim.
                          I don't want to be a burden on anyone, and seeing as I'm still a fairly new member here I think I'm safer just trading, i wouldn't want anything to go wrong and ruin things w/ the Shim Club..

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