This brings me to what I hope others might find to be a useful technique for removing stuck slides. This is a much better method that than the screwdriver. I cut a ~21 mm circle out of heavy sheet metal with a hole saw. You can probably find a thick washer that will serve the same purpose. The hole saw provided a 1/4" hole in the middle of the circle. I then drilled two small holes on either side of the 1/4" hole for the two small screws that mount the slide arm to the slide. I then took a 3" one-quarter inch bolt and ran a die down it to give more threads. The bolt was placed thru the hole in the 21 mm circle and with the threaded end pointed to the top of the carb the two small screws were inserted into the slide. This provided a secure handle coming out of the top of the carb body. I then placed a couple of 2" fender washers and a nut on the 1/4" bolt. Now for the real secret that was taken from experience in removing and installing cycle wheel bearings. I poured a pot of boiling water over the carb body, mounted the carb gently in a vise, and tightened the nut. The slide came out easily and smoothly. I was successful with two carbs, both of which had been soaked in a tank of carb cleaner and sprayed for many many days.
So after all of this, I discovered another unpleasant fact. The slides from the '77 750 are slightly different. The thickness of the slide wall from my '78 is ~2.3 mm. The slide from the Ebay carb is ~3.8 mm. The length and diameter of the two slides are the same. So, if anyone has a good slide from a '78 GS750 that they would like to trade or sell, I would be most interested.
Even though it is unlikely that I will use the carb body with the messed up pilot air screw, I thought that I would try to remove it just for practice. My thought was to drill a small hole in the center and use a tiny Easy Out. Does this sound like a workable plan?
Please send a PM if you would care to part with a slide from a '78.
Thanks,
rickt
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