As many of you know, I rebuilt my carbs last week and manually synched them.
It's a 1977 gs550 by the way.
Now here's the full story.
About a week and half ago, I decided it was time to do some work on the bike. First I wanted to make sure it would still run, so I charged up my battery, popped it in and went to start it up. Well, it took a while, a long while, but she started. (note the long while it took - means it ran my battery down a bit)
So I figured that the changes I did last year were still working (changed the coils, points and condensers).
However, I had some unsightly stains on the carbs that weren't there before, on my carb bowls and what not, so I knew that my carbs would need some work.
So I hooked up the Keyster carb kits and with the help of Keith and others, rebuilt the carbs, replacing the jets, resetting the float heights, replacing o-rings etc. I manually synched the carbs.
Well, I popped them back in today, replaced my sparkplugs (the old ones were all fouled) and tried to start it.
Now here's some more info. While putting my carbs back in, I must of hit a wire or something because a bolt I was putting in to the side of the airbox sparked and blew my main fuse. When I finally got the bolt in, I made sure it wasn't pinching any wires or anything.
Well I got it all back together, new main fuse, primed the carbs and tried to start it. No dice........... the starter turns over, and the bike sounds like it used to when it was cold, but it just wouldn't fire up.
Good news is that the main fuse hasn't blown again. There's fuel in the carb bowls (I checked). Now after trying to start it for a while, I decided to check for spark. My spark was very, very weak, which I attributed to my
battery being low. So I brought it in, and sure enough it was reading 11.84 volts on the meter. Probably from trying to start the bike for so long.
I couldn't tell if the new plugs were wet, how can you tell?
So here's the question. What the heck should I do?
ps. I'm recharging the battery as we write.
Satch
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