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Vapor lock?
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cwlindstrom
Vapor lock?
I own a 79 GS750L I can ride it all day long as long as I keep it below 70MHP. If I push it above 70MPH for more than 10 min it starts to act as if it I am running out of fuel and then dies. If I let it sit for 5-10 min it starts again but onlt when fully choked and then it takes a few minutes to warm up. Seems like some kind of vapor lock problem. Has anyone run into this before?Tags: None
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Forum SageCharter Member
Past Site Supporter- May 2002
- 3869
- The Gulf Coast of south Florida in the winter and northern Nevada in the summer
gas cap
When that happens, you might want to immediately open your gas cap to see if it sucks in a bunch of air. If that's the problem, you can't miss it...it will be really obvious. It certainly sounds as though that could possibly be it. It's probably not...but it's easy to check. Good luck and let us know!:-D1980 GS1100E....Number 15!
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aosmith
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cwlindstrom
Thanks for the replies. I will try the gas cap and the Stator. I am heading out for a week long cruise in the morning. I'll let you know what happens.
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tfb
If you have an inline fuel filter installed, THROW IT AWAY. They are common culprits for the dreaded vapour lock.
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twistedwankel
Originally posted by cwlindstrom View PostI own a 79 GS750L I can ride it all day long as long as I keep it below 70MHP. If I push it above 70MPH for more than 10 min it starts to act as if it I am running out of fuel and then dies. If I let it sit for 5-10 min it starts again but onlt when fully choked and then it takes a few minutes to warm up. Seems like some kind of vapor lock problem. Has anyone run into this before?
As has been mentioned repeatedly on this site. You cannot get vapor lock on a gravity feed system.
You are running the carb bowls dry at the higher speed is all it sounds like. Eventually you will go slower and slower and slower...you get it.
Ethanol added gas will strip the rust and goop off the tank walls too.
Good luck
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Mine did the same thing when the pecock was bad. Just get a new one if the tank has good venting and you don't have an auto style fuel filter. Also your vent lines between carbs 1&2 and 3&4 cannot be exposed to wind or you will experience fuel starvation. These lines either need to go away (if running pods) or run in between the frame and the airbox.1983 GS 1100E w/ 1230 kit, .340 lift Web Cams, Ape heavy duty valve springs, 83 1100 head with 1.5mm oversized SS intake valves, 1150 crank, Vance and Hines 1150 SuperHub, Star Racing high volume oil pump gears, 36mm carebs Dynojet stage 3 jet kit, Posplayr's SSPB, Progressive rear shocks and fork springs, Dyna 2000, Dynatek green coils and Vance & Hines 4-1 exhaust.
1985 GS1150ES stock with 85 Red E bodywork.
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tfb
You cannot get vapor lock on a gravity feed system.
Because what else should we call it when a bubble trapped in the inline air filter expands due to the heat from the engine, and mostly fills the filter body, so blocking the fuel flow? "Vapour lock" is a logical term for this, I would have thought: a bubble of fuel vapour is locking the fuel flow.
Semantics aside, and as many on this site will agree, if you've got an inline fuel filter, throw it away! The fine nylon gauze filter inside the tank does a brilliant job, so there's no need for more troublesome clutter along the fuel line.
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Killer2600
Originally posted by tfb View PostTwistedwankel, please explain.
Because what else should we call it when a bubble trapped in the inline air filter expands due to the heat from the engine, and mostly fills the filter body, so blocking the fuel flow? "Vapour lock" is a logical term for this, I would have thought: a bubble of fuel vapour is locking the fuel flow.
Semantics aside, and as many on this site will agree, if you've got an inline fuel filter, throw it away! The fine nylon gauze filter inside the tank does a brilliant job, so there's no need for more troublesome clutter along the fuel line.
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twistedwankel
Originally posted by tfb View PostTwistedwankel, please explain.
Because what else should we call it when a bubble trapped in the inline air filter expands due to the heat from the engine, and mostly fills the filter body, so blocking the fuel flow? "Vapour lock" is a logical term for this, I would have thought: a bubble of fuel vapour is locking the fuel flow.
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jimcor
Originally posted by chef1366 View PostMine did the same thing when the pecock was bad. Just get a new one .
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tfb
That vapor bubble won't block fuel flow in a gravity feed system
In fact, maybe if we didn't have a gravity feed system on our bikes, but had a fuel pump helping push the fuel through, then the inline filters wouldn't give us the grief that they so often do with (and I'm going to persist in calling it this!) vapour lock.
Debate aside, all I'm really saying is that if cwlindstrom has an inline filter installed, there's a very good chance it's the problem. Therefore, throw it away!
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twistedwankel
Originally posted by tfb View Post
In fact, maybe if we didn't have a gravity feed system on our bikes, but had a fuel pump helping push the fuel through, then the inline filters wouldn't give us the grief that they so often do with (and I'm going to persist in calling it this!) vapour lock.
So you take a soda straw (tube) in a glass of any liquid. Put your finger over the end and lift it out of the glass. The liquid remains magically suspended within the tube.
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tfb
That's not confusing! A drinking straw is just narrow enough for capillary action to hold the liquid in the tube -- but that's not a force that's going to apply to something as wide as a fuel line.
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