Ok everybody smarter than me...my bike went from idling at 3k after warming up to climbing to 5k after I tightened down the carb boots.
Here's what I know:
The throttle doesn't stick. I checked for slack and for routing to see if that was causing it.
I pre-synced it with a single strand of copper wire from a stranded 16 ga wire peice I had laying around...so it's not the butterflies. They open and close smoothly with enough resistance in the springs to keep them closed. The tension matches my 79 special's carbs.
My idle screws are 1.25 turns out across. And to clarify this, I turned the screw 360 degrees for a single turn.
I just installed fresh carb parts from z1 enterprises (jets, valves, etc...all the things that came in the rebuild kit).
I thought I set my float heights...can't find my notes on what I set them to, but I'll check this evening.
Questions about what I noticed and did and my plans to lower the rpm.
1. Should I count 180 degree rotation as a single turn on the idle screws?
2. The replacement springs for the idle screws are much smaller...what impact will this have? They're about 3/4 the size.
3. The butterflies are almost closed as it is...what impact will turning the main idle knob under the carbs to close the butterflies even more have on the idle? I read some on the forum about trying to make the engine sputter...then gradually opening it? Is that right?
4. By tightening the boots, why did the rmp jump 2k? If I had a vacuum leak because the carb boots weren't tight, wouldn't the rpms drop since more fuel is being pumped into the engine than air?
I plan on rechecking the float heights today. Pre-synching them again...maybe I screwed up somehow. Probably did. Then turning my tank around and raising the idle screws to 1.5 turns and slowly turning them in by 1/4 turn increments. Am I taking the correct approach?
Here's what I know:
The throttle doesn't stick. I checked for slack and for routing to see if that was causing it.
I pre-synced it with a single strand of copper wire from a stranded 16 ga wire peice I had laying around...so it's not the butterflies. They open and close smoothly with enough resistance in the springs to keep them closed. The tension matches my 79 special's carbs.
My idle screws are 1.25 turns out across. And to clarify this, I turned the screw 360 degrees for a single turn.
I just installed fresh carb parts from z1 enterprises (jets, valves, etc...all the things that came in the rebuild kit).
I thought I set my float heights...can't find my notes on what I set them to, but I'll check this evening.
Questions about what I noticed and did and my plans to lower the rpm.
1. Should I count 180 degree rotation as a single turn on the idle screws?
2. The replacement springs for the idle screws are much smaller...what impact will this have? They're about 3/4 the size.
3. The butterflies are almost closed as it is...what impact will turning the main idle knob under the carbs to close the butterflies even more have on the idle? I read some on the forum about trying to make the engine sputter...then gradually opening it? Is that right?
4. By tightening the boots, why did the rmp jump 2k? If I had a vacuum leak because the carb boots weren't tight, wouldn't the rpms drop since more fuel is being pumped into the engine than air?
I plan on rechecking the float heights today. Pre-synching them again...maybe I screwed up somehow. Probably did. Then turning my tank around and raising the idle screws to 1.5 turns and slowly turning them in by 1/4 turn increments. Am I taking the correct approach?
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