Started out pulling the carbs, since I left gas in the tank and figured they were wrecked after three years.
No "before" photos. Just imagine this with a scuffed & peeling blue gas tank and a reasonably decent seat.
The carbs were pretty filthy on the outside, but the internals weren't too bad. The bike came with a manual petcock and I guess it was turned off.
I was going to dip the carbs, but after tearing them apart I didn't think it was necessary. I used spray can carb cleaner and lots of rags. I made sure I could see through all the jets and that all the passages in the carb bodies were clear. Got everything nice and organized with an egg carton I snagged from my local breakfast burrito joint.
The bike came with pods and a Kerker 4-into-1 exhaust when I bought it. The jetting I found in the carbs is 112.5 mains and 20 pilots. From the Pods Pipe Panic! thread, it looks like stock jetting is 95 main and 15 pilot, and I remember the bike seemed like it was running rather rich (clouds of exhaust smoke when opening up the throttle on the highway, little to no torque at low RPM for setting off). Do these seem like reasonable jets? I'm not sure.
The bike also always had the clutch rattle in neutral at idle, and there were a couple instances of what felt like clutch slippage when setting off at high acceleration, so I decided to open up the clutch basket and have a look.
Turns out the hub nut was rather loose. After fighting with the bent washer for a little while, I managed to get everything disassembled.
Three of the springs in the back of the hubs were, of course, loose enough to shake around. I got in there with a big flat-bladed screw driver and stretched them out until they were snug. One of them was stubborn and still rattles a teensy bit, but I'm not too worried.
While I was in there, I measured the clutch springs and discs. Everything looked fine.
Clutch spring service limit is 1.46in.
Drive plate limit is 0.09in.
While I was reassembling the clutch, I managed to shear a clutch spring bolt off in the pressure plate. That's what I get for using a torque wrench at the absolute lowest end of its torque range. Fortunately, a trip to Ace Hardware yielded six new bolts and fender washers.
The new bolt next to an old bolt and the sheared-off head.
Be sure to install the clutch release rack in the pressure plate before torquing down the clutch spring bolts.
I also snagged some M10 castellated nuts for the motor mount bolts. The rear motor mount bolt had a nylock nut on it, and the front bolt didn't even have a nut on it.
While I was around the motor mount regions, I noticed that I was missing the M10x60mm lower motor mount bolts and accompanying teardrop nuts. I'll have to pick some of those up.
Finally, I tore off the valve cover and checked the tappet clearances. I shimmed the tappets when I bought the bike, but haven't checked them since. I don't have a set of metric feeler gauges (and the sets available on McMaster-Carr don't even go down to 0.03mm), so I went by the US Customary conversion of 0.001-0.003in. Unfortunately, the thinnest gauge I could find was 0.0015, so I just used that along with a 0.003 and 0.004 gauge to make a kind of three-way go/no-go gauge. All the tappets look good except the #2 intake valve, which is right at 0.004 clearance.
That's all for the first weekend. I have o-rings coming in for the carbs from cycleorings.com and I'll be placing an order with Z1 tomorrow for the carb gaskets, new SS brake lines, and new points and condensers (though I'm thinking about getting the Dyna-S electronic system. Worth it for $133?). Next weekend I'll re-assemble the carbs, drop the oil pan and clean out the screen, then button everything back up and hopefully have it running. Of course, photos will follow. I know everyone likes photos.
Comments, criticism, and feedback are solicited and appreciated!
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