I recently bought a 1982 Suzuki gs750t (the maroon one, I wish it was the black one). Anyhow, the bike had a flat spot. When you hit 3500 rpm and continued to give it throttle, the RPMs would drop down to 2500. Continue to increase the throttle and the RPMs would suddenly jump up and you'd go flying.
From what I've heard (I'm totally new to biking), this is a sure sign you need to clean your carbs. So my wife and I got bold, ripped out the carbs and cleaned them for the very first time in our lives.
After this, I tested it a little, and only a little so far. But it seems like the problem just moved to a higher RPM range - above 4000 now. I don't know if the rpms recover at a higher range yet since it was after midnight and I was making a lot of noise in my garage.
Is this a sure sign that I have to clean them again, and this time do a better job? By the way, I soaked the main jets and washers, the needle jets, and the float needles for about two hours. After a little compressed air, the holes in the main jets looked noticeably cleaner. Could it be those little holes on the side of the needle jets that need more work? The float bowls looked gunky, but I didn't soak them as there appears to be some deteriorated rubber seal left on the edges.
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