Earlier in the spring I basically rebuilt the engine and carbs. (honed cylinders, replaced piston rings, dipped carbs, replaced o-rings, replaced all gaskets, reset valve clearance, etc.) Once I got the bike back together it actually ran! (somewhat to my surprise) It actually ran pretty well, though it idled a bit high. But I've been able to ride it since then with no bogging, stalling, or other performance issues. However, I know that the carbs still needed synching.
Let me explain the high idle issue. With the idle screw all the way out, the bike still idled around 2K rpm on the tachometer. If I screwed in the idle screw, the idle would increase, but if I screwed it out it would never drop below 2K on the tach. The bike would start with virtually no choke almost instantly. Since I wanted to ride more than I wanted to spend more time in the garage, I left things as-is, and it's been running great all summer apart from the high idle 'problem'.
However, I finally got a manometer:
and decided to tackle the idle issue and get the carbs synched. I figured that compared to everything else, this would be an easy job. No such luck.
I went to calibrate the manometer, and hooked all 4 lines into cylinder 4. No problem. Used the screws on the manometer to balance the levels (they were about mid-range on the site glass at this point) and then hooked each hose into its proper cylinder. Upon starting the bike, at least 2 of the columns in the manometer rose to the top of the site glass. (I was ready for this and killed the engine before anything got sucked into the hose.)
So, I worked on decreasing the idle speed. I used the manual/mechanical screws (the ones you're supposed to use to adjust the carbs) to lower the idle throttle so that the idle screw would now respond the way it was supposed to. Set the idle to what reads at 1500 rpm, but I'm not sure my tach is 100% right, as there's not much range between 500-1500 on my tack. Below 1500 the bike *sounds* like it's about to stall, and much below that it actually will.
So, this time I decided to try to get the manometer gauges at the low end of the scale. And, since cylinder 3 is unadjustable, I decided to use that to balance the manometer. Started the bike, and *all 4* of the cylinders rose to the top of the sight glass.
Thinking I had something else wrong, I checked my fuel needle screws (? the ones on top of the carbs, that were under a small plate that I had to drill out when cleaning the carbs) by re-seating them and then turning then back out 2 turns. (I originally had them at 2.5 turns out.) Still, the manometer max'd out upon starting the bike.
I turned down the idle to as low as it would go without stalling the bike, and still the manometer went off the scale. I did a "by ear" adjustment of the screws (turning them up until the idle started going up, then backing them off a quarter turn) just to try to get everything in rough synch. Still, no matter what I do, cylinder 3 still goes off the scale.
If cylinder 3 is doing this, how can I get the other 3 cylinders in line?
After doing this, I do get slightly better off-the-line performance, but less top-end pick-up, and possibly less top-end speed. (I used to be able to hit the throttle at 70 mph and get a bit of a kick. Now I get just slow, gradual acceleration, with a top-end of about 90. I usually don't travel at those speeds, but I was pretty sure I had it up to about 100 previously.) Maybe this has something to do with turning in the fuel jet screws half a turn? Or was something wrong previously and this is the performance I should expect?
My assumptions: The pistons, while sitting on the bike, going left to right, are 1-2-3-4, right? Cylinder 3 is the one that can't be adjusted, correct?
Anyone have any suggestions as to how to lower the vacuum enough to allow a synch of the carbs? Am I missing something?
Side note: The manometer had 'bubbles' in the columns as soon as I hooked it up to calibrate it. Is there anything that can be done about this? I'll have a column of liquid, 1/4" (or more) of bubble, then 1/2" of liquid. Is the manometer bad? Should I send it back? Assuming that there's nothing can be done, where do you take the balance reading? at the top of the liquid above the bubble? or the top of the liquid below the bubble?
Thank you for your suggestions, both in regards to this problem and all the help from my previous posts when I was getting my bike running this past spring!
Comment