I bought a GS1000ST about 3 weeks ago, and have been having lots of fun fixing it up.
The tank was majorly rusty inside, so while I had the thing off and put a POR-15 tank cleaning and lining kit through it, I also took the opportunity to clean out the carbies. Good thing I did so; they were full of rusty mud. :roll:
Now I know that the manual screams at you not to touch the air mixture screws because they are set at the factory, etc. etc. ... but as they had obviously been fiddled with already, I thought I'd pull them out and give them all a clean into the bargain. Alas, I now realise it might have been a good idea to record how many turns out each one was, because the bike has obviously been tuned with them set the way they were.
The long and short of it is, the bike is running, but maaate she's rough (was relatively smooth before) and does a lot of surging at lower engine speeds, etc. My question is, can anyone help me with re-setting the mixture screws?
Now I should say I am talking about two kinds of mixture screw on each carbie. The first are located on the underside of the 'exhaust' outlet of each carburettor, ie. towards the engine. They simply allow air into the inlet tracts. [Edit: but I just read somewhere that winding them out lets more fuel through and so things are made richer, is that right?]
The other mixture screw (well, I assume it is to do with the carbie mixture), is on the 'inlet' side of the carbie, ie. on the airbox side. They are easily accessed as they are located on the upper & outer side of the carbie. They also have a small reference mark of some kind, stamped/ punched into the carburettor body at the edge of the screw head.
Now then, the first kind of screw I have set at 2 turns out from fully seated. This is seems to be the setting where the bike runs 'happiest', but I have to say it's still pretty darn rough, and I have had to wind up the idle speed knob to stop it from stalling.
The second kind of screw I have set about 1/4 turn out. I tried aligning the screw slot with the reference marks, but this didn't seem to improve things any.
Needless to say the manual is no help on this score... "do not disturb" and "set at the factory" are not the kind of words I like to see.
Any clues? Or should I just pull out the carbie vacuum gauges, balance them and be done with it?
Cheers,
Mike.
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