Your Mileage May Vary
If you build 12 stock Elevens exactly alike (factory spec) they all will be within 2%-3% of each other. If you build 12 Elevens, some having OEM parts, some having a hodgepodge of aftermarket parts tuned by 2 or 3 previous owners by guess, it's anybody's guess how they will run. Add to this scenario the fact that some have large fairings, small fairings, small windshields, large windshields, no windshields and yada,yada ,yada and it's no wonder for the difference in gas mileage. A stock Eleven with stock exhaust will work fine with the stock main jets, needles and floats set at the factory recommended setting however the 80-81 can benefit from an air pilot jet change and idle screw adjustment as they suffered from a lean condition at off idle. The needles in the 80-81 are not adjustable with clips like the 78-79 however you can thin the plastic/nylon donuts beneath the needles or use small washers depending on the direction you want to go. The 78-79 because of the clips are more easily adjustable but the principle is the same. Mention is made that the needles in the 80-81 Specials are different from the needles in the 80-81 Standards and should not be interchanged. I have also seen guys use the adjustable needles from the 78-79 in the 80-81 however you will need a dyno with a sniffer to ever get the fuel curve right with this combination because all these needles vary in taper, tip diameter and length. The Four Forces Of Nature are no different today than they were in 1979 nor is the XS Eleven or the shop manual that covers it and consequently doesn't need to be rewritten just because the people of today think they are smarter than the Japanese engineers who designed it.
A "new" XS worked well in 79 and works well in 09 but can obviously be improved upon with sound engineering techniques but you better damn well know what your doing when you start making changes or you will wind up with something inferior to the original stock piece.
Someone asked me about their clutch and I told them what they should use after which they talked to a dozen people and wound up buying the cheapest damn stuff they could find, too bad.
This is a good example of why the performance of these old bikes vary all over the place but like the old saying, [B][U]you can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink. Good luck and power to the people.
Originally posted by Crazcnuk
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A "new" XS worked well in 79 and works well in 09 but can obviously be improved upon with sound engineering techniques but you better damn well know what your doing when you start making changes or you will wind up with something inferior to the original stock piece.
Someone asked me about their clutch and I told them what they should use after which they talked to a dozen people and wound up buying the cheapest damn stuff they could find, too bad.
This is a good example of why the performance of these old bikes vary all over the place but like the old saying, [B][U]you can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink. Good luck and power to the people.
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