the last week my xj has become extremely cranky about starting. i've never had much trouble before. the plugs are less than 2 months old and are all nice and tan. the fuel is flowing fine and there is a new filter in the box. junk in the carbs maybe? tonight it would chug but took forever to hit. any ideas where to look? thanks,
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
hard starting
Collapse
X
-
temps
not to bad was in the upper 50s today. its cranked ok in the low 30's before. its just suddenly got contrary. i got a hot battery ( i had better since i sell them for a living). the weather is supposed to crap out tonight so i will re examine all 4 plugs tomorrow. forecasting 40mph winds tomorrow, so i'll spend the day in the shed. got a new set of fork ears to install as well.
Comment
-
Check/adjust pick-ups, ignition timing, some choke thingie in the carbs got plugged up, old gas, goo in gas filters... petcocks or in-line... battery weak... I mean... TCI doesn't like to work much below Iforgothowmany volts... bad ground connection starter -engine (unlikely) - frame, forgot the lights, mice in the airbox, banana in the exhaust, bad compression, poor spark plug cap connection, poor ign. coil connection or fuse connection, rotten wiring... or the bike simply hates you.
LPIf it doesn't have an engine, it's not a sport, it's only a game.
(stole that one from I-dont-know-who)
Comment
-
oh joy
after dorking an hour or so discovering the universal fork ears i picked up for the front headlight and lights wouldn't fit i turned my attention to the real task at hand. i rechecked the plugs all a nice tan, everything nice and tight at the coils, clean new air filter (30$ thanks yamaha) and a good battery. i decided to pull the carbs and clean the bowls replace the fuel line. when i popped them out of the boots and slid them out i noticed the far right (throttle side) boot had a split just behind where the hose clamp seats. it was all the way through and 3/4 of the way around the boot. i can only imagine how much air it was sucking in. it will need to be replaced. i went ahead and dropped the first bowl to see how it looked. it was reasonable clean except for the mud pie in the bottom drain. before i go any further its off to the zone for an industrial can of carb cleaner.
Comment
-
Re: steppin in it
Originally posted by kf4anm
on the carb tops the two inside diaphrams are stretched a little and do not want to seat back into the grove. is there a trick to working them back in or are new ones in order?Bill Harvell
Comment
-
diaphram
thanks bill for the tip, i let them set over night and when i got in from work today they went right into place. i ran over to sears hardware and picked up new screws for the inside 2 and fancier allen heads for the outers. gonna go tomorrow and pick up a new intake boot from crc2 after work. hopefully i can get the carbs back in and the bike fired by tomorrow night.
Comment
Comment