I have owned a 1979 F model for a little over two years. When I bought it it ran poorly. The bike is in very nice shape and only had 19,000 miles on it when purchased. The bike is stock except that I have done the fuse box mod, it has Mac 4-2 exhaust system, and a K&N air filter in a stock air box.
I took it to a local mechanic and he was upfront and honest when he commented "I typically don't like to work on bikes older than me" He cleaned the carbs and adjusted the valve timing and got it to run better, but again admitted that he did not think he could do any better . . . at least he was honest with me. I have worked off and on with it for two years and am running out of ideas,
I have done a lot of research on this forum and have tried to pin down the problem.
The bike consistently runs rich on cylinders 2 and 3. The plugs on 1 and 4 look just about perfect - a light tan). It does not matter the rpm setting at which I run the bike. Yesterday I ran it about 6 miles at between 6,000 and 7,000 rpms (in second gear so I did not kill myself), and hit the kill switch and coasted to a stop. The plugs are still heavily carboned on 2 and 3.
I'd like to think that I could rule out the carburators. The mechanic cleaned them once. I pulled all the jets and ultrasonically cleaned them all back this spring and rebuilt them with a George Fix kit (all new jets). I cleaned them again yesterday with a can of carb cleaner and compressed air, paying special attention to the pilot circuit and the enricher (choke) circuit. I have replaced the floats and set them accurately. Too make sure that the fuel is at the same level in the bowls, I drilled-out some 8 mm Zerk fittings and put them in the bottom of the float bowls. I ran some vinyl tubing and leveled the bike. I ran the bike a few minutes and the levels in all four bowls were identical . . . 1-2 mm below the gasket surface.
Now from an electrical stand-point:
I have replaced the ignition coils with NOS ignition coils.
New NGK spark plug caps.
The generator/voltage regulator is charging the battery within spec according to the Yamaha Service Manual
A previous owner did the pick-up coil fix. I tugged on the wire while checking the resistance and it did not vary and was within spec.
The vacuum advance is rotating to 36 degrees when a vacuum of 150 mm is applied.
Tip-over switch resistances are within spec.
Ballast resistor resistance is within spec.
Checked, cleaned, and coated all electrical connections with dielectric grease.
About the only thing left, that I can think of is the TCI box. I am thinking of replacing that, but before I spend the money, I would like to know of any other possible issues that I may not have addressed.
Also I checked the Snorkel . . . it is clear. I also replaced all the vacuum hose on the bike just to be sure that I did not have a vacuum leak somewhere.
I am sorry for this being so long, but I wanted to cover everything that I have done on the bike, so maybe someone could give me afresh perspective!
I took it to a local mechanic and he was upfront and honest when he commented "I typically don't like to work on bikes older than me" He cleaned the carbs and adjusted the valve timing and got it to run better, but again admitted that he did not think he could do any better . . . at least he was honest with me. I have worked off and on with it for two years and am running out of ideas,
I have done a lot of research on this forum and have tried to pin down the problem.
The bike consistently runs rich on cylinders 2 and 3. The plugs on 1 and 4 look just about perfect - a light tan). It does not matter the rpm setting at which I run the bike. Yesterday I ran it about 6 miles at between 6,000 and 7,000 rpms (in second gear so I did not kill myself), and hit the kill switch and coasted to a stop. The plugs are still heavily carboned on 2 and 3.
I'd like to think that I could rule out the carburators. The mechanic cleaned them once. I pulled all the jets and ultrasonically cleaned them all back this spring and rebuilt them with a George Fix kit (all new jets). I cleaned them again yesterday with a can of carb cleaner and compressed air, paying special attention to the pilot circuit and the enricher (choke) circuit. I have replaced the floats and set them accurately. Too make sure that the fuel is at the same level in the bowls, I drilled-out some 8 mm Zerk fittings and put them in the bottom of the float bowls. I ran some vinyl tubing and leveled the bike. I ran the bike a few minutes and the levels in all four bowls were identical . . . 1-2 mm below the gasket surface.
Now from an electrical stand-point:
I have replaced the ignition coils with NOS ignition coils.
New NGK spark plug caps.
The generator/voltage regulator is charging the battery within spec according to the Yamaha Service Manual
A previous owner did the pick-up coil fix. I tugged on the wire while checking the resistance and it did not vary and was within spec.
The vacuum advance is rotating to 36 degrees when a vacuum of 150 mm is applied.
Tip-over switch resistances are within spec.
Ballast resistor resistance is within spec.
Checked, cleaned, and coated all electrical connections with dielectric grease.
About the only thing left, that I can think of is the TCI box. I am thinking of replacing that, but before I spend the money, I would like to know of any other possible issues that I may not have addressed.
Also I checked the Snorkel . . . it is clear. I also replaced all the vacuum hose on the bike just to be sure that I did not have a vacuum leak somewhere.
I am sorry for this being so long, but I wanted to cover everything that I have done on the bike, so maybe someone could give me afresh perspective!
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