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Project: 1985 GS550ES
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MelodicMetalGod
Originally posted by t3rmin View Post
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MelodicMetalGod
Last edited by Guest; 07-15-2007, 11:27 PM.
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Schweisshund
Sea Foam Deep Creep
Hey there - get some seafoam deep creep from advance or autozone. Saturate your carbs (one at a time) and after saturation, restart and stand back (the smoke is normal). This will completely clean out the carbon (do this when engine is hot).
rinse, lather, repeat. You should see results immediately.
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Schweisshund
deep creep
to be more specific - warm up engine - take screw out of boot closest to engine on one set of carbs - saturate with deep creep (loosen boot near air box saturate that end as well) then restart engine and stand back - it will smoke for a long long time (prepare to replace spark plugs if needed after this) , then do the same process for other set of carbs.
get your carbs adjusted/syncronized if it still idles high - one or two is out of sync.
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the high idle is from the either a carb boot leak or the pilot jets. When they're lean the bike will do that.You'd have to be crazy to be sane in this world -Nero
If you love it, let it go. If it comes back....... You probably highsided.
1980 GS550E (I swear it's a 550...)
1982 GS650E (really, it's a 650)
1983 GS550ES (42mpg again)
1996 Yamaha WR250 (No, it's not a 4 stroke.)
1971 Yamaha LT2 (9 horsepower of FURY.)
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MelodicMetalGod
Originally posted by Schweisshund View Postto be more specific - warm up engine - take screw out of boot closest to engine on one set of carbs - saturate with deep creep (loosen boot near air box saturate that end as well) then restart engine and stand back - it will smoke for a long long time (prepare to replace spark plugs if needed after this) , then do the same process for other set of carbs.
get your carbs adjusted/syncronized if it still idles high - one or two is out of sync.
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MelodicMetalGod
Originally posted by Nerobro View Postthe high idle is from the either a carb boot leak or the pilot jets. When they're lean the bike will do that.
Do you agree with my assessment of the plugs?
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MelodicMetalGod
Airbox Boot Seal
Learned something new last night: Airbox boots are not permanently attached to the airbox. Wish I'd know that before. Live and learn.
When I pulled the boots from the air box I found that there was dried "something". Is this just "gunk" or is it the remnants of a sealant? If a sealant, what sealant should be used?
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Schweisshund
I have a 1983 Nighthawk CB 700 SC that did the exact same thing you are describing. High idling. It would actually idle at 2,000 rpms when cold then shoot up to over 5,000 rpms and stay there. I could not figure out what it was and took it to a friend of mine who used a mannometer (sp?) to synchronize each carb. That did the trick. Each jet needle has to have the same vacuum pressure if my understanding is correct. There were 4 on my Nighthawk and there are 4 on my GS 550 E.
You might want to see if your carburator linkange is bent as well. OEM?
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MelodicMetalGod
Originally posted by Schweisshund View PostI have a 1983 Nighthawk CB 700 SC that did the exact same thing you are describing. High idling. It would actually idle at 2,000 rpms when cold then shoot up to over 5,000 rpms and stay there. I could not figure out what it was and took it to a friend of mine who used a mannometer (sp?) to synchronize each carb. That did the trick. Each jet needle has to have the same vacuum pressure if my understanding is correct. There were 4 on my Nighthawk and there are 4 on my GS 550 E.
You might want to see if your carburator linkange is bent as well. OEM?
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Schweisshund
Noticed your from MD - DC area. I went to Gallaudet University for 6 years (am deaf) on Florida Ave NE :-D I know a deaf mechanical wiz in Laurel named Dusan Jaksic whom may have a mannometer. I also heard one person say you can use propane to tell if there is a leak in your boots (I wouldn't try it myself though). The concept is to turn the gas on while the engine is running and place the gas near the boots, if the engine fires rapidly then there is a leak. I wouldn't want to find out the hard way if the propane gas ignites (I don't understand enough about it to try).
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MelodicMetalGod
Originally posted by Schweisshund View PostNoticed your from MD - DC area. I went to Gallaudet University for 6 years (am deaf) on Florida Ave NE :-D I know a deaf mechanical wiz in Laurel named Dusan Jaksic whom may have a mannometer. I also heard one person say you can use propane to tell if there is a leak in your boots (I wouldn't try it myself though). The concept is to turn the gas on while the engine is running and place the gas near the boots, if the engine fires rapidly then there is a leak. I wouldn't want to find out the hard way if the propane gas ignites (I don't understand enough about it to try).
I don't think I'll be going the propane route. :-| I'm currently replacing the intake boots and o-rings as they're the likely culprit. I aslo need to address the union of the air box and boots. After that, I'll get into the finer carb tuning and I may very well contact you about getting in touch with Dusan Jaksic. Thanks!
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No, your plug read is off. Your plugs are slightly white. That means lean, which indicates carb boot leak. Did you replace your carb boot o-rings? The ones I pulled off of my 83 cracked when they fell to the ground. They were D E A D.You'd have to be crazy to be sane in this world -Nero
If you love it, let it go. If it comes back....... You probably highsided.
1980 GS550E (I swear it's a 550...)
1982 GS650E (really, it's a 650)
1983 GS550ES (42mpg again)
1996 Yamaha WR250 (No, it's not a 4 stroke.)
1971 Yamaha LT2 (9 horsepower of FURY.)
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MelodicMetalGod
Originally posted by Nerobro View PostNo, your plug read is off. Your plugs are slightly white. That means lean, which indicates carb boot leak. Did you replace your carb boot o-rings? The ones I pulled off of my 83 cracked when they fell to the ground. They were D E A D.
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Jagir
Originally posted by Schweisshund View PostI also heard one person say you can use propane to tell if there is a leak in your boots (I wouldn't try it myself though). The concept is to turn the gas on while the engine is running and place the gas near the boots, if the engine fires rapidly then there is a leak. I wouldn't want to find out the hard way if the propane gas ignites (I don't understand enough about it to try).
Have you replaced your hoses with clear ones? The local shop just gave me a few short lengths of this to replace my old black ones. This will help you diagnose.
good luck
j
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