Well, I FINALLY got the bike fired up tonight. There has been a lot of work put into this bike to get it ready for daily use again between the transmission repair, carb cleaning, final drive clean/grease, gas tank electrolysis (followed by pin hole repair...), brake cleaning/flushing, etc., etc., etc.
It REALLY pissed me off when I finally went to start it. After setting the tank on the frame backwards and hooking up the fuel lines, I added about 1 1/2 gallons of fuel and then carefully checked for leaks. No leaks! I then turned the peacocks on to prime and waited for 10 seconds. When I hit the start button, it fired right up!
And ran for about 3 seconds before sputtering and dying! I spent the next hour trying to get it so much a cough again, let a long run. The gas was fresh, the tank was clean, the carbs where clean. I opened up the drains on each bowl and verified that I had gas and the gas was good, clean gas (it was). I pulled an inner and outer plug and verified that I had spark at each cylinder. Nothing seemed to want to get this bike running. I even hooked up my battery charger to the battery while starting (it has a start mode) to make SURE I had enough voltage. Nothing worked.
Finally, I pulled the outer plugs and shot about 1/2 an ounce in each hole and tried it that way and I was finally able to get it running. I had to do the gas trick twice, but after the second time, all four cylinders cleaned out and started running right.
After a bit of tweaking on the idle speed and setting the pilot mixtures, it was running pretty cleanly. The only thing I have noticed is that I have the pilot screws out between 2 1/2 to 3 turns on each carb. Per the service manual, I DO need to put smaller pilot jets in the thing. That is going to wait for a long weekend before I do that! Pulling the carbs on this beast is NOT my idea of a good time!
All in all, she is in a lot better shape than she has been in a long time. I have replaced a lot of the rubber (gas cap seal, rear brake isolator, assorted o-rings, brake caliper bleeder screw caps, foot peg covers, etc.), FINALLY cleaned all the rust out of the gas take, went through the carbs top to bottom including new main and pilot jets, all new fluids, repaired transmission, and on and on and on... She definitely needed the work.
Now I just can't wait until tomorrow when I am going to take her out and see how she likes the TLC.
It REALLY pissed me off when I finally went to start it. After setting the tank on the frame backwards and hooking up the fuel lines, I added about 1 1/2 gallons of fuel and then carefully checked for leaks. No leaks! I then turned the peacocks on to prime and waited for 10 seconds. When I hit the start button, it fired right up!
And ran for about 3 seconds before sputtering and dying! I spent the next hour trying to get it so much a cough again, let a long run. The gas was fresh, the tank was clean, the carbs where clean. I opened up the drains on each bowl and verified that I had gas and the gas was good, clean gas (it was). I pulled an inner and outer plug and verified that I had spark at each cylinder. Nothing seemed to want to get this bike running. I even hooked up my battery charger to the battery while starting (it has a start mode) to make SURE I had enough voltage. Nothing worked.
Finally, I pulled the outer plugs and shot about 1/2 an ounce in each hole and tried it that way and I was finally able to get it running. I had to do the gas trick twice, but after the second time, all four cylinders cleaned out and started running right.
After a bit of tweaking on the idle speed and setting the pilot mixtures, it was running pretty cleanly. The only thing I have noticed is that I have the pilot screws out between 2 1/2 to 3 turns on each carb. Per the service manual, I DO need to put smaller pilot jets in the thing. That is going to wait for a long weekend before I do that! Pulling the carbs on this beast is NOT my idea of a good time!
All in all, she is in a lot better shape than she has been in a long time. I have replaced a lot of the rubber (gas cap seal, rear brake isolator, assorted o-rings, brake caliper bleeder screw caps, foot peg covers, etc.), FINALLY cleaned all the rust out of the gas take, went through the carbs top to bottom including new main and pilot jets, all new fluids, repaired transmission, and on and on and on... She definitely needed the work.
Now I just can't wait until tomorrow when I am going to take her out and see how she likes the TLC.
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