Hey all. Same ol' 78 GS1000E with a tick over 48k sitting in the garage since early September. Here's the history. Last summer I rebuilt the carbs, new battery, new oil, filters, acid in the tank, etc. All the good stuff you do to a time capsule not started since Reagan was in office.
Ran like a champ. Felt like it would pull tree stumps out of the ground. Rode 25 miles on a Saturday night without a hitch. Then Sunday.
Started it up, went up the street, turned around using a perfect-o left hand u-turn a la MSF course and it stumbled...and it died. Luckily home was downhill and I coasted in. Out of gas? Tossed in a couple of gallons and...it ran like crap. I figured there was still some junk in the tank and the left turn sloshed it into the petcock and into the carbs. Pulled the tank and the carbs. Cleaned the carbs, and found a little bit of fine silt in the bowls, figured it was some leftovers from the tank. Cleaned the tank and holes from rust opened up. Tired of the rust, off to the radiator shop. Cleaned, patched and epoxyed. Off for paint. WInter project. Now I am ready for action.
This morning. Stuck the big pipes of the bike out of the garage, dumped some gas in my "new" tank and hit the button. Nothing. Will cough with ether in the airbox, and try like heck to turn over. It wants to go as bad as I do man.
The only thing I have not been through is the petcock. But what is going to get through the screens? Drained the tank using the "prime" setting and gas seemed to flow just fine, but watching the gas line when trying to start it didn't show much gas running. Not like I remember. I remember when I first ran it, gas would flow on prime until the bowls were full. So fast it freaked me out a bit I recall.
I don't know. I think I've been over it, but I may be missing something in my frustration. Three bikes in the garage in various stages of disrelpair, the oldest is a 74 and the newest is an 84. But the GS is what I want on the road. ANY thoughts are appreciated.
The moral of the story. Never turn left.
Comment