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  • #16
    Originally posted by Bellerophon View Post
    Well, I worked on the bike all weekend. Got the carbs on and it's absolutely poring fuel out the air box. Obviously a stuck float or somesuch. I'll send Rick an email and see what he thinks. I can't bring myself to tear it down again this weekend.
    When you fill the bowls for the first time, try tapping the bowls with a screwdriver handle. That way, the floats will raise up smoothly with the gas, instead of sticking at the bottom.
    2H7 (79) owned since '89
    3H3 owned since '06

    "If it ain't broke, modify it"

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    • #17
      Leakamus Fuelimus???!!!

      Originally posted by Bellerophon View Post
      Well, I worked on the bike all weekend. Got the carbs on and it's absolutely poring fuel out the air box. Obviously a stuck float or somesuch. I'll send Rick an email and see what he thinks. I can't bring myself to tear it down again this weekend.
      Dude...Duuude!!! So sorry to hear that the install didn't go perfectly.

      Even when I myself do a carb rack I bench test'em for leaks before I wrangle them onto the bike/airbox and open the petcocks.

      Lookey HERE.

      Not as refined/slick as MRO's setup but he's a Pro and I'm still in the amateur class.

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      • #18
        Originally posted by Larrym View Post
        Dude...Duuude!!! So sorry to hear that the install didn't go perfectly.

        Even when I myself do a carb rack I bench test'em for leaks before I wrangle them onto the bike/airbox and open the petcocks.

        Lookey HERE.

        Not as refined/slick as MRO's setup but he's a Pro and I'm still in the amateur class.
        Excellent idea Larry. Now you understand whay I asked the fuel line question earlier. When it started leaking I thought I might have hooked'em up wrong. I did not.
        2016 Yamaha FJR1300A
        2007 Kawasaki KLR650A
        1979 Yamaha XS1100SF
        1971 Kawasaki F6 125

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        • #19
          A few things I have found that can cause the floats to stick open..

          ... Gasket surface overhanging the carb bowl edge, I trim it back on the sides to ensure the floats will not get hung up.

          ... Use the tang on the back of the floats to ensure they do not drop to far.

          ... Make sure you are using fuel line that will not flake apart when pushed over the barbs on the Ts. Those little flakes can get past the screens on the float valves and stick under the needle valve.
          Life is what happens while your planning everything else!

          When your work speaks for itself, don't interrupt.

          81 XS1100 Special - Humpty Dumpty
          80 XS1100 Special - Project Resurrection


          Previously owned
          93 GSX600F
          80 XS1100 Special - Ruby
          81 XS1100 Special
          81 CB750 C
          80 CB750 C
          78 XS750

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          • #20
            While I'd like to say I'm some sort of a genius mechanic, but I'm not. I did however follow bikerphil's advice and and it quit, slowly but surely. I pulled the bottom of the air box off so I could see which carbs were overflowing, and they all were. As I tapped the float bowls they all quit, one at a time. Rick used composite floats on the rebuild, and I'm not sure if that had anything to do with it. I left the petcocks on prime for over an hour and no more leaking.
            2016 Yamaha FJR1300A
            2007 Kawasaki KLR650A
            1979 Yamaha XS1100SF
            1971 Kawasaki F6 125

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            • #21
              Excellent, Glad you got them to stop misbehavin.
              Life is what happens while your planning everything else!

              When your work speaks for itself, don't interrupt.

              81 XS1100 Special - Humpty Dumpty
              80 XS1100 Special - Project Resurrection


              Previously owned
              93 GSX600F
              80 XS1100 Special - Ruby
              81 XS1100 Special
              81 CB750 C
              80 CB750 C
              78 XS750

              Comment


              • #22
                Yep, any time the bowls are dry the floats are prone to stick. Sometimes it's the float itself or it could be the needle valve cocked in it's seat. Once you have fuel in there you shouldn't have that problem again.
                2H7 (79) owned since '89
                3H3 owned since '06

                "If it ain't broke, modify it"

                Comment


                • #23
                  My experience has been that genuine Mikuni float valves look a bit better (through a magnifying glass ) and seal properly out of the box. The float valves that come in various rebuild kits, often require tapping on the float bowls, "smoothing" with a pencil, etc. to start sealing initially, but work fine from then on. Did you ask Rick what brand float valves he used?

                  --Nick

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                  • #24
                    Yep, any time the bowls are dry the floats are prone to stick. Sometimes it's the float itself or it could be the needle valve cocked in it's seat. Once you have fuel in there you shouldn't have that problem again.
                    I still need to tend to mine with similar problem. If I go WOT in 1st-2nd gear, my bowls go low enough to start the problem anew. A well placed whack with a dead blow hammer makes things right again. I need to get to that soon.
                    Marty (in Mississippi)
                    XS1100SG
                    XS650SK
                    XS650SH
                    XS650G
                    XS6502F
                    XS650E

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