Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Running out of things to look for

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #16
    Hi folks and happy new year
    I poked around my GS some more this morning. Let me answer the above questions-but first- my GS has 16k miles, owner said he had it for 10 years and let it sit for the last year. By all appearances it looks to be very well taken care of. It is quite clean and definitely does not look as old as it is. I have no reason to believe the owner changed the jets ( he didn't feel comfortable cleaning the carbs himself so I kind of doubt that'd he'd be switching jets out) and we both live at the same elevation.

    Ok, on to the questions


    Originally posted by GQROD View Post
    Don't lose heart, you have to be methodical.

    I didn't read your prior posts however this may help sort things out......

    1.Did you check the AIR jets to make sure they are matched to your fuel jets? Are they clean?

    How do I match the fuel and air jets? All the jets have been soaked and throughly cleaned with carb cleaner

    2.Is the tank full of fuel? ( sometiems you get to half tank the engine shuts off cause the petcock lever has to be in the reserve position. )

    No, but petcock is on reserve

    3.Is the petcock in the correct position meaning prime then on or reserve if you don't have a lot of fuel in the tank while tuning.

    On reserve

    4.Are vac hoses getting kinked when you put the tank back on?

    No

    5.Is your fuel line getting kinked when you put the tank on?

    No

    6. Do you have the correct size jets in your carbs? on mine i had to go up one on my pilot jets in order to get a good steady idle from the stock 35 to 37.5

    I doubt they have been changed but unfortunately I haven't checked

    7.Are you absoulutely sure all the carb passages and jets are clean?

    As sure as I can possibly be. Everything was dipped and passages sprayed with carb cleaner


    8.Is your choke cable and throttle cable adjusted properly?

    Choke turns on and off smoothly and throttle has very small amount of slack.

    9.Are the bowls full of fuel?

    Previous times I've pulled the carbs they have been

    Do the valve adjustment pronto!

    Yessir!@

    10. Did you bench sync the carbs before you mounted them per the factory manual?

    Yes

    11.Are your plugs gapped properly? Are they new?

    New B8ES- .030 Gap

    12.Did you do plug chops to determine what color the mixture is? this will lead you to the problem right away.

    See below!
    14. As was already asked how many turns are your fuel screws?

    n/a

    15. How many turns out are your air screws?

    3

    16. Have you adjusted the throttle with the throttle stop screw to get the correct idle?

    As best I can but the unstable idle means I'm always fiddling with it to get the idle correct. I get the idle set, then 5 seconds later it goes too high, then 5 seconds later too low, etc..

    Once all these questions are answered you will no doubt be closer to finding the problem just take one step at a time and eliminate as many issues as possible remembering what happened after each step was taken ie: did it make the bike run better or worse?

    Hope this helps

    So something I noticed today while attempting to do my valves (ended up not having thin enough feels guages. I'll get some tomorrow) was that

    A. While turning the motor with the 19mm socket I found that the metal ring that rotates with the socket was rusty on the little tab that protudes out and spins by what I believe to be the pickups. Basically the piece of metal that passes by the pick-up was rusty, so I used some sand paper to clean it.

    B. Spark plugs 1 & 4 were very black and sooty. Plugs 2 & 3 were clean and light tan colored. Cylinders 1 & 4 do fire when the engine is running.

    C. Periodically while the sync gauge was hooked up, the rubber hose from boot 1 & 4 would pop off and I'd heard a cooresponding light popping noise. This stuck me as odd. If it's creating a vacuum like it should then it should be actually sucking the hose on tighter, not blowing it off. Also interesting is that it is only happening on the two cylinders with the dark, sooty plugs.

    Perhaps I need to start looking at ignition things? Any ideas?
    Thanks

    Comment


      #17
      I'm beginning to think I may need to do the coil relay mod- http://members.dslextreme.com/users/...relay_mod.html

      Comment


        #18
        The coil relay helps and is worth doing it. I did it and it makes a world of difference in roll on performance and start up.

        Check the mixture on those cylinders where it's too rich and adjust your mixture screws using the hihest idle method if you don't have a colortune.

        Then check the plugs to see what the color is to tell wether you are making it better or worse.

        Don't trust what the po said it could be he got into the carbs changed things for the worse and now you have problems.

        Even if he was telling the truth doesn't hurt to make sure you have the right size jets in there.

        Comment


          #19
          Originally posted by VP1 View Post
          I'm beginning to think I may need to do the coil relay mod- http://members.dslextreme.com/users/...relay_mod.html
          Before you do the coil mod, just check this:
          Testing the ignition system:


          Properly localising a problem with the ignition is sometimes a bit confusing and the following below should of assistance:
          1. Basic test, remove spark plugs. Fit them to the plug HT leads and ground them to the engine. Turn engine with starter and see if plugs spark. If any one spark plug does not spark swap it out. If the spark seems good on all 4 plugs, the ignition system is very likely in order. If spark is not present or very weak proceed with the following tests.
          2. Remove the tank, left side cover, seat and signal generating unit (pickup) cover at bottom right of engine.
          3. A good habit is to check the coils and igniter to see if they do not get very hot once the ignition is switched on, as this will most likely be the indication of a failed component of faulty connection or wire.
          4. If the spark is weak but present, inspect the HT leads and plug caps. Suspect coil wires and spark plug caps, or voltage at the coils and thus the battery condition. It could also be due to coils with partially shorted windings, but do not jump on this cause immediately, and they may get hot.
          5. Overheating coils with no spark may also be due to them getting a permanent full ground either from a faulty igniter or a grounded and pinched wire. Disconnect the coil plug connectors and proceed with tests.
          6. Measure the battery voltage directly across the battery terminals. If lower than approximately 12.6V first charge battery fully before proceeding.
          7. Next measure voltage over the coil connector plug, orange/white wire and the battery negative terminal. If lower than 12 Volt inspect the wiring for poor contacts and localise cause of voltage drop.
          8. Again measure directly across the battery, but pull off the spark plug leads to prevent engine from firing and swing with starter. While starter is turning the voltage should stay at least above 11 Volt. Also swing the starter with the headlights on to see that the voltage does not drop significantly at the coils while the starter plus headlights load the battery, which could prove that even if your battery is fully charged, it cannot give full or sufficient current and is on its way out or your starter may be drawing excess current (usually unlikely if starter is spinning at full speed) and pulling the battery down. If it drops much lower, charge battery fully or have it load tested and replaced if faulty.
          9. If all is well up to here you can assume your battery and the positive feed to your coils are in good order.
          10. With the coil plug connectors disconnected, use an ohm meter and measure the resistance of both windings on each of the coils. Exact resistance measurements are not too important, but continuity of the windings close to the approximate resistance values given indicates that the coils are in good condition. It must be noted that it is possible for the coils to only show up a fault when at higher operating temperatures, but this does not happen frequently.
            Ignition coil resistance:
            Between the two HT plug caps of the same coil, secondary HT winding, approximately 30 – 35 K ohm
            Between the orange/white and white on the first coil and orange/white and black/yellow on the second coil, primary winding, approximately 2-5 ohm. If this test is within limits you likely have two good coils.
          11. Locate the igniter and disconnect the plug with the blue and green wires coming from the signal generator (pickup) at the right bottom of the engine. Test the resistance across these wires coming from the signal generator pickup coils, it should be approximately 250 – 360 ohm. If this is in order you have proved the pickups and the wires to be good.
          12. The little back box or igniter is now tested as follows. With the ignition on, kill switch on, test for 12 Volt DC between the orange/white and the black/white wires in the plug going into the igniter. This proves that it is getting the correct voltage.
          13. The next step is to prove whether the igniter is powering your coils. Remove all 4 spark plugs and connect the HT lead caps to a spark plug #1, #2, #3 and #4 which is grounded and located to enable you to see the spark. Ensure all the connector plugs are back in, except the one with the green and blue wires from the signal generator.
          14. To simulate the small voltage generated by the pickup coil, prepare an ordinary 1.5V dry cell with two wires red for positive and black for negative. Connect the negative black wire from the dry cell to the blue wire on the connector plug going into the igniter. Switch on the ignition and kill switch to power the igniter and briefly touch the red wire from the dry cell positive to the green wire connector going into the igniter. You should see a spark on plugs #1 and #4 when you touch the wire and on #2 and #3 when you remove the wire. If this works your igniter is in a working condition.
          15. One other check that is often overlooked. Run the bike at night with all lights off in a dark area and check that no sparks are jumping from the HT leads to the frame or tank. If so they may need replacing.
          16. At this stage if all tests have passed you MUST get a spark at all the plugs when everything is reconnected and the engine is turned with the starter.
          17. If a spark that was previously missing has mysteriously appeared, have a very good look at your wiring and connectors, as something may be making intermittent contact and corrected itself temporary when you moved the wires.
          18. If there is a spark, but the engine will not fire, it could be due to ignition timing, valve timing or fuel problems. Ignition timing and valve timing problems are more likely on a bike that has not run yet after being disassembled and more unlikely to be the cause if the bike was not taken apart and was running before.
          19. A quick test with a few drops of fuel directly into the cylinders before replacing the spark plugs and then trying to start will prove it to either the fuel system or ignition system.
            1. If the engine then starts and runs for a few RPM's the ignition is correct and you need to look at the fuel and carburettor side.
            2. If the engine does not fire, but occasional gives one load pop through the carburettors or even exhaust, it may be igniting when the valves are open, the valve timing may be a problem, cam chain or swapped wires from pickup – plugs firing at wrong time.
            3. Other reasons could be extremely low compression, too tight valve clearances, thus not closing fully (usually unlikely on all cylinders at the same time, but plausible), carburettor faulty or dirty, fuel line, filter or petcock faulty. Filter can cause an airlock if not positioned properly to allow free gravity feed.
            4. Then finally the ignition timing must be set properly. At less than 1500 RPM connect a timing light to #2 or # 3 spark plug and check that the timing marks line up for 2-3 on F, then move to #1 or #4 spark plug and check that marks line up for 1-4 on F. Check the advance by pushing revs up to 2350 RPM and the timing marks should both line up on the 45 mark behind the signal generator mounting plate through the sight hole at the top. The three mounting screws can be loosened and the mounting plate can be moved slightly in the elongated holes to meet this.

          Last edited by Guest; 01-01-2009, 06:07 PM.

          Comment


            #20
            A quick rule of thumb for any motorcycle float bowl carb. If the mixture screw is on the engine side of the slide assembly the screw controls fuel flow for the low speed circuit. If the adjustment screw is on the airbox side of the carb slide the screw controls air flow into the low speed circuit.

            Comment


              #21
              sounds like an overly rich condition.

              Comment

              Working...
              X