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I've worked at a hardware store for three years now (owned by my uncle) only to hear my uncle and co-worker constantly go back and forth about bikes. Mark, late 40's, owns a Honda Valkyrie and a Honda Goldwing while John, mid 40's, owns a Harley Road King. Another co-worker, Steve (early 20s) bought a 1983 Suzuki GS550L in boxes in an attempt to be "one of the guys". He put everything back together, rode it only here and there, and ran into money issues. I had been eyeing it up for quite some time and when he needed to sell it, I jumped on the opportunity (he sold it for me for only $200!). So now, Wil (17yrs old) has his first bike. A 1983 Suzuki GS550L. And I love it.
I bought the bike back in Nov. and since then have only been able to ride it once. Getting it to start at all is a complete chore and prevents me from even think of going anywhere with it until I can get it to start nicely. Everytime I need it to run, gotta pop the seat off, spray in the starting fluid, and press "start" only to hear it catch the fluid for maybe 5 seconds and die (full choke entire time). Repeat this several times (less starting fluid each time of course) and it will finally stay running. Now getting the choke off. I have only successfully done this once. I waited over 20minutes (keep in mind it's kind of cold here in Mich. right now) easing off the choke while giving it little bits of gas. The one time I got it to stay running with no choke was the one time I rode it to see that it indeed run. Since then, I have decided I need to take it in to get work done until I can do anything further.
Being a senior at high school, I have the advanced class of "Auto Tech". Since my teacher worked at a Harley Davidson dealer as a mechanic (he unfortunately got laid off over the weekend), he volunteered to help me out (when he's not showing off his own bike now that someone else has one too :roll: ). I brought it in before Christmas break and haven't had a chance to work on it until this first week back.
First things first, took the carbs off. During the removal process, the choke cable had to be removed. To my horror, once off, the wire emitted a cloud of "rust dust" which needs to be replaced. Whether it's fully broken, I do not know but I'm praying this is the solution to my starting problem. The carb came off soon after and the dismantling process has begun. Of course, this sparked the entire "Why can't the Japanese galzinize anything like Harley does" conversation from Mr. Clark (teacher). Unexpectedly, it appears the carb is pretty clean with no real obstructions. Regardless, Mr. Clark recommended I get a carb-rebuild kit which I found out do not exist for the 1983 model. What would you recommend I do with the carb now? I know I could let it sit in carb cleaner (I also heard mineral spirits) but I have distinct memories of a certain Honda Spree in which I did the same thing only to see no change in performance (it ended up in the front yard soon after I got fed up with it which was about a week later). However, I refuse to let that happen to this bike as I love everything about it.
While looking over the bike, Mr. Clark also asked what gas I had in the bike and I replied "Regular Unleaded". He, of course, instantly said that was insanely stupid of me and demanded I only put 93 octane in. Granted I know Harleys want premium (remember I sit around my work hearing nothing more Harley and Honda specs flying around), but a bike this old really shouldn't. However, I need it to run nice and since frankly, it doesn't, I went out and bought premium for it when the carbs are reattached. Is putting premium in a good move at this point or pretty much useless?
Other random things that need to be fixed: new front tire as the one now is too dry-rotted to be even remotely safe, front left fork gasket as there isn't even one there now, two new turning signal brackets for front (any have some for sale?), and possibly a new fuse/relay. For some reason, when the right turn signal is engaged, all the lights stay on completely and do not blink. I'm guessing this is a fuse or relay of some kind but once again, I'm coming to you for advice.
In the end, I've had bad luck when I get a motor vehicle that doesn't run right. I work on it profusely, buying the necessary parts, only to have it still not run/not run well and me selling it out of pure frustration. However, like I said, this is my new prized possession and will treat it like my baby (which I doubt it was by the owners before me). Thus, instead of attempting to fix it myself, I brought it to a professional to try and do the best job possible.
Any help would be more than appreciated. Am I doing things right? If not, what should I do instead? What things should I be doing? Etc.
One last thing. Steve (previous owner) has D8EA NGK plugs put in, so I went and bought the same to replace the older ones. However, my Clymer manual says to use D9EAs, not D8EAs like Steve had in. Did this/will this hurt anything by running the bike with D8EA's?
Again, thanks for any info you can possibly give!
- Wil
Pics of the bike:
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