A few blocks down the road, the bike started running rough. It proceeded to get worse as I went along. Adjusting the choke had no impact on how she was doing. A little further along, and I had to keep some decent throttle in her while stopped to keep it from dying.
A little further, and I even had to keep the throttle up while driving. This lead me to downshift approaching a light (to keep rpm's up as I slowed). The engine died, the rear locked up, and I had a good slide going. I was able to figure out what was going on quick enough to squeeze the clutch, recover the slide without a spill, and not end up in the middle of the intersection. More excitement than I like in the morning.
Now, about three blocks from my parking spot (up a steep hill of course), she died, and this time, she wasn't starting back up. Not even a pop. I waited a while, to see if something would settle out, but nothing. So, I started pushing her up the hill. After a block, huffing and puffing, I turned it onto level ground, and got back into the saddle to have a rest. I decided to give it another go, and low and behold, she started right up. I kept the engine racing, and nursed her the last two blocks to where I park.
So, whats going on? ('85 GS550L, w/ the weird double-barrel carbs.)
My best guess is there is some combination of dewpoint / relative humidity / temperature, that is giving me fits. Maybe, as the air is accelerated through the carb, pressure drops, the water vapor becomes liquid, and is really messing with combustion? It has run a little rough in wet conditions in the past, but nowhere near this bad before.
Is there anything I can do about it? (Other than don't ride when it is cold & wet)
Thanks in advance,
Rob
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