The weather was pretty nice today - mid-60s - so I took my '79 XS1100 out for a iron-out-the-wrinkles drive. I have some issues with the way it runs under 3,000 rpm, which I believe are the carb holders - or at least one carb holder - but since have very little interest in driving at less than 3,000 rpm I will worry about that later. It runs great over 3,000 and my shoulders are pretty sore.
One thing concerned me, however. I was tearing down Highway 79, really torquing it, when I had to ease off a bit because of a really inconsiderate driver who doesn't understand how we drive in Texas IN THE LEFT LANE. Anyway, I got around her and I gunned it again. My bike suddenly was running poorly. It was missing on one, maybe two cylinders. I got to a stop light and revved it a little thinking I might have to do that to keep it running. When I took off again everything was fine. It was a burner again. As I ran it home the mysterious missing happened again, this time when I wasn't torquing quite so hard. But I was forced to slow down and travel at a lower rate of speed behind a rolling roadblock that looked like a Suburban. Afterward the power was back and I had no further recurrences. I gunned it coming up my street and almost slid off the back.
When it cooled I pulled the plugs. One two and three were a nice tan. Number four was different, somewhat whiter.
I have three theories. 1. A bit of grime in my shiny clean carbs locked jammed somewhere until I eased off the throttle. 2. While messing with my hitherto perpetually leaking petcocks (healed now, apparently) I stretched the spring behind the diaphram a bit too much and leaned up the fuel flow a bit too much. 3. I set the carb floats at 25mm and that may not allow enough fuel into the carb bowls when I am seeking liftoff velocity.
Which do y'all think most likely, based on these symptoms? I'd really like to solve this once and for all.
Thanks, y'all,
Patrick
One thing concerned me, however. I was tearing down Highway 79, really torquing it, when I had to ease off a bit because of a really inconsiderate driver who doesn't understand how we drive in Texas IN THE LEFT LANE. Anyway, I got around her and I gunned it again. My bike suddenly was running poorly. It was missing on one, maybe two cylinders. I got to a stop light and revved it a little thinking I might have to do that to keep it running. When I took off again everything was fine. It was a burner again. As I ran it home the mysterious missing happened again, this time when I wasn't torquing quite so hard. But I was forced to slow down and travel at a lower rate of speed behind a rolling roadblock that looked like a Suburban. Afterward the power was back and I had no further recurrences. I gunned it coming up my street and almost slid off the back.
When it cooled I pulled the plugs. One two and three were a nice tan. Number four was different, somewhat whiter.
I have three theories. 1. A bit of grime in my shiny clean carbs locked jammed somewhere until I eased off the throttle. 2. While messing with my hitherto perpetually leaking petcocks (healed now, apparently) I stretched the spring behind the diaphram a bit too much and leaned up the fuel flow a bit too much. 3. I set the carb floats at 25mm and that may not allow enough fuel into the carb bowls when I am seeking liftoff velocity.
Which do y'all think most likely, based on these symptoms? I'd really like to solve this once and for all.
Thanks, y'all,
Patrick
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