I just uncrated the bike again and I'm ready for my next round of repairs. About 10 years ago I thought I had the proper handle on the carbs, but I want to do it Right this time. Age is not making this easier, neither is my only sporadic use of the bike (2-3 decent trips a summer).
I give you, the beast's guts. (The rest of this photo set is http://www.flickr.com/photos/planet-...7600189486787/ )
The question is, what do I tackle first... I have to preface this with "It starts!" - Put the key in, a little choke, and it starts right up. Choke down after 5 minutes of warmup and it's ready to go.
I'm doing a couple basic things first:
1) Replacing that amazing air filter. How beautiful is that, eh? NOT!
2) Draining and refilling the oil, and putting in a new filter - basic stuff there.
3) Draining and... what? with the gas tank. The tank sits for the winter half full, I've heard mention that rust in the tank can cause needle valves to stick - what's the best procedure for cleaning out an almost 30 year old gas tank?
Here are the things I must fix before I can have confidence in riding it any distance though.
1) The petcock is leaking. I hadn't noticed it before, but turning it to reserve or primary causes it to be drippy. I've seen mention of petcock rebuild kits
- shoudl I just go ahead with that?
2) The dreaded overflow leakage. This has been a problem for years. My understanding is the basic job is to pull the carbs, do a rebuild on them, and put them back together - this is just the needle valves sticking with gunk on them. Should I try just running carb cleaner through them first?
3) This seems minor, but it keeps bugging me. Why does my choke cable slip? I can't choke without wrapping something around the pull lever to hold it up. Just replace the choke cable?
All of this is before I've gone for my first checkout ride. I really want an engine that doesn't leak gasoline everywhere. IS that too much to ask?
Anyone in Boston wanna do a weekend or two of repairs with me?
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