Firstly, I`m sorry if this subject has been covered to death in the past but have used the search feature and still not answered my question fully.
So, the bike is a 1979 GS1000S. The bike has always seemed very laboured to turn over on the starter. Almost seems like a flat battery. However,the battery is fully charged and kept on an optimiser when the bike is stood.
Have removed the starter and this spins freely both by hand and on the button. Have taken it apart to check brushes etc and all is fine.
Take the plugs out of the engine and without compression the motor spins faster and freely. Don`t know if the motor is standard or wether it has higher compression/cams/big bore etc.
Have taken the cover off and turned the starter gear by hand, spins freely clockwise and bites if you try to turn it anti-clockwise, so that appears to be in order.
HOWEVER, tried to start it today and very slowly it turned over and fired with the choke on. Popped the choke back in and the motor died. When I tried to restart the bike, the starter seemed to spin over at what you would assume to be a good rate but the motor did not turn over with it, like the starter clutch was not engaging and turning the crank over.
Bump started the bike no problem and when running the engine pulls like a train and doesn`t miss a beat. Turned it off and tried to restart but same again. Bumped the bike again and took it out for a 6 mile round the block ride. When I turned it off and tried to start it again, this time the starter worked fine and turned the engine over, albeit slowly again.
Anyone got any ideas as to what I should be looking for? Could it be the weights sticking? Any pics of how it all works?
Any help greatly appreciated.
Kind regards
Tim
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