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  • #31
    I have been syncing them but it's really a waist of time while she's missing. All timing parts work freely. The bike is stored in a dry heated space.
    Anyway. I just took the carbs off AGAIN and I am switching out the brass floats to the plastic ones that were in it when I originally got the bike. I noticed that one of the needle valve bodies was loose. Hmmm, I check the sealing gasket which is made of some sort of fiber and it, like all the others appears deformed and try to slip up over the valve body so I have replaced them with alloy washers. This might be the entire issue even if she wasn't leaking fuel. I now however, can't remember if I set those plastic floats the same as the brass ones. They are the floats that came with the bike when I first got it and I did all my original work from the manual so I will guess that they had been set to the factory spec. I'll keep you posted.
    Rob
    KEEP THE RUBBER SIDE DOWN

    1978 XS1100E Modified
    1978 XS500E
    1979 XS1100F Restored
    1980 XS1100 SG
    1981 Suzuki GS1100
    1983 Suzuki GS750S Katana
    1983 Honda CB900 Custom

    Comment


    • #32
      Hey, Rob...

      Feel your frustration.

      Just for the sake of saying it's been done...

      Start the bike and get it warmed up good.
      Get a spray bottle of water, spray on each header to check for steam.
      If all 4 pipes steam, each cylinder is firing. Or not...if you find one that doesn't steam.

      If that passes... Proceed to test 2...
      If not, check ignition, and complete test 2...
      After dark, start the bike. Turn off all lights. Look for any arcing around the spark plug wires that may be shorting to ground around the engine. Bad wires, or bad coil? Test for strong fire... (Blue arc to ground.)

      If that passes...proceed to test 3.
      '79 F's were bad about breaking the wire at the timing plate.
      Now, I know you said you've checked this before, but you might check it again. This single broken wire has fooled many of us before...and will cause the bike to run like total crap. Couldn't hurt... Use a DVOM, check continuity as you flex the wire around, engine and key off, of course. Sometimes the insulation will fake you out.

      If that passes...proceed to test 4.
      Synching carbs. In the past, I have had lots of issues with carbs, but the one problem that carbs out of synch will always exhibit... erratic idle problems, and vacuum advances that dance around wildly. No matter how perfect you may get the idle set, the next throttle blip may make it surge up dramatically.
      Also, increased popping on decel. I found that adjusting each bank to their highest vacuum readings FIRST, then adjusting them equally to one another yielded the best result. That's my personal findings, though. YMMV.

      Test 5... Ignition timing perfect? Off one tooth?

      As was said by others previously though, if all else fails when trying to troubleshoot a troublesome engine problem, go back to the baseline tests.

      Air/Fuel, fire, compression, timing, exhaust.
      If it's in time, intake draws fuel and air, in the proper amounts, it's properly compressed, ignition, in the proper amount occurs at the proper time, and then the exhaust valve opens...it should run.

      I know you already know this. Please don't take this the wrong way... I have to remind myself like this sometimes too when I get stuck.
      Sometimes, I can't see the forrest for the trees...so to speak, ya know?

      If, after all these tests, it still runs like puke...it might be time to try a known perfect condition loaner set of carbs from another bike...just to eliminate the possibility of some little carb passage that's still blocked.

      When I was a fleet mechanic, and we'd get one in that had us baffled, it was always a process of elimination...no matter how improbable, or simple. Whatever you overlooked, or ruled out as improbable...was probably the problem.
      I saw it happen to many good mechanics...more than once.

      Basically, just presenting the obvious list...in hopes that it might help.
      '82 XJ1100J Maxim (has been sold.)

      '79 F "Time Machine"... oh yeah, Baby.... (Sold back to Maximan)

      2011 Kaw Concours 14 ABS

      In the warden's words from Cool Hand Luke;
      "What we have here is a failure to communicate."

      Comment


      • #33
        Just noticed you posted while I was typing...

        Keeping my fingers and toes crossed for ya!

        Hope you found it in the carbs.
        '82 XJ1100J Maxim (has been sold.)

        '79 F "Time Machine"... oh yeah, Baby.... (Sold back to Maximan)

        2011 Kaw Concours 14 ABS

        In the warden's words from Cool Hand Luke;
        "What we have here is a failure to communicate."

        Comment


        • #34
          No change, still missing, RPMs float when given a little twist, sync is holding by would still need a fine tuning if the miss can be corrected. I am beginning to think it's not a carb problem after all.
          Number 2 is the coolest cylinder with the lazar thermometer. but all the plugs look the same and a little lean. Black without soot on the base ring and a little white on the tips. No carbon deposits. SO, tomorrow I will take the carbs off AGAIN, off the rack, full strip down and bench test the fuel levels in each one, re-rack and install them. If that does not do the trick I will consider the carbs as NOT being the problem and then start looking for an ignition issue. Perhaps I will pull all the timing guts out and replace it with the timing from the 79 special I have here. Maybe I should do that before I pull the carbs again just to eliminate that as a potential issue.
          Rob
          KEEP THE RUBBER SIDE DOWN

          1978 XS1100E Modified
          1978 XS500E
          1979 XS1100F Restored
          1980 XS1100 SG
          1981 Suzuki GS1100
          1983 Suzuki GS750S Katana
          1983 Honda CB900 Custom

          Comment


          • #35
            Hey Rob,

            Just a little thing to think about. You say it can be synched, but then after synch, still missing. How OLD are the synch port caps??? They can age, harden, and actually LEAK a bit. I remember someone posting about chasing a carb problem until they found/figured out it was the old synch caps. JAT!

            T.C.
            T. C. Gresham
            81SH "Godzilla" . . .1179cc super-rat.
            79SF "The Teacher" . . .basket case!
            History shows again and again,
            How nature points out the folly of men!

            Comment


            • #36
              Hey TC, the caps and retaining holders are new within a year. It's missing even while syncing it when she's hooked up to the hoses. It'll miss and the needle on #2 will go out of whack then back to it's synced position, then miss again. The missing is occasional. The only thing that has me thinking it a carb issue is the way the RPMs float after giving the throttle a quick twist up to the 4 to 5K range. Than she'll settle down to rough idle rather slowly. Then I will set the idle again, only to have the idle be way off the next time I give the throttle another quick twist.
              It's got to be carbs but I have cleaned them several times now and air flows through every passage freely as does spray carb cleaner. In fact, the only thing I have not cleaned is the chock system because the carbs must be off the rack for that so they will be done next with the bench fuel level tests
              Could the chock system cause this much trouble if they are in deed blocked of not clean enough?
              Rob
              KEEP THE RUBBER SIDE DOWN

              1978 XS1100E Modified
              1978 XS500E
              1979 XS1100F Restored
              1980 XS1100 SG
              1981 Suzuki GS1100
              1983 Suzuki GS750S Katana
              1983 Honda CB900 Custom

              Comment


              • #37
                Choke/enrichener can/will stick if not cleaned once in a while or left to sit gets sticky. Could be sticking open slightly choking/enrichening the cylinder to where it won't idle and hang up in the rpms.
                Last edited by donebysunday; 08-18-2014, 10:08 PM.
                76 XS650 C ROADSTER
                80 XS650 G Special II
                https://ibb.co/album/icbGgF
                80 XS 1100 SG
                81 XS 1100LH/SH DARKHORSE
                https://tinyurl.com/k6nzvtw
                AKA; Don'e, UD, Unca Don'e

                Comment


                • #38
                  I had guessed that the chock system. if not clean or sticky would only have an effect on the the fuel system if it were engaged. In any case i will be cleaning those while I have the carbs off the rack
                  Rob
                  KEEP THE RUBBER SIDE DOWN

                  1978 XS1100E Modified
                  1978 XS500E
                  1979 XS1100F Restored
                  1980 XS1100 SG
                  1981 Suzuki GS1100
                  1983 Suzuki GS750S Katana
                  1983 Honda CB900 Custom

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Almost forgot, I am running premium fuel in this bike. I was told by a mechanic friend that running premium fuel would be best because here in Canada there is no ethanol in premium fuel. That being said we know that premium fuel does not ignite as readily as regular fuel and the lad next door told me that he was running premium fuel in his bike from the early 80s and he had issues with it including not being able to get the engine to idle at factory spec RPMs. Could I be having the same issue? Could the premium fuel be part of the problem?
                    Rob
                    KEEP THE RUBBER SIDE DOWN

                    1978 XS1100E Modified
                    1978 XS500E
                    1979 XS1100F Restored
                    1980 XS1100 SG
                    1981 Suzuki GS1100
                    1983 Suzuki GS750S Katana
                    1983 Honda CB900 Custom

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      If it truly is non E premium sitting for a few years should not affect it's degrade as much or corrosion/chemical reaction with the parts turning the fuel green. Let my 70 GTO sit for 3 years with 1/2 tank of Sunoco 260 and fired right up when an emergency caused me to put it back on the road. Still would have some problem with evaporation but did not experience any difficulties with MMO added, it's unbelievable what this stuff can do to clean the fuel system tank/carbs/valves/pistons.

                      Originally posted by 79XS11F View Post
                      Almost forgot, I am running premium fuel in this bike. I was told by a mechanic friend that running premium fuel would be best because here in Canada there is no ethanol in premium fuel. That being said we know that premium fuel does not ignite as readily as regular fuel and the lad next door told me that he was running premium fuel in his bike from the early 80s and he had issues with it including not being able to get the engine to idle at factory spec RPMs. Could I be having the same issue? Could the premium fuel be part of the problem?
                      Rob
                      76 XS650 C ROADSTER
                      80 XS650 G Special II
                      https://ibb.co/album/icbGgF
                      80 XS 1100 SG
                      81 XS 1100LH/SH DARKHORSE
                      https://tinyurl.com/k6nzvtw
                      AKA; Don'e, UD, Unca Don'e

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Rob,
                        JAT, have you tried another spark plug in #2?
                        Maybe it's a bad plug? Had that happen to me once.
                        New set of plugs, one was factory defective internally.

                        If not, and #2 is quite a bit cooler at the header than the others, I'd focus on that cylinder... (ignition, fuel, compression...)
                        I wouldn't think it would be a coil problem, but perhaps a wire.
                        Coil should affect 2 cylinders, I would think...but ya never know.

                        If it's ignition miss, it will show up on your vacuum guage when it happens.

                        Header temp trick is a good indicator of cylinder performance, and helps identify which one's giving you the problem, most times.
                        '82 XJ1100J Maxim (has been sold.)

                        '79 F "Time Machine"... oh yeah, Baby.... (Sold back to Maximan)

                        2011 Kaw Concours 14 ABS

                        In the warden's words from Cool Hand Luke;
                        "What we have here is a failure to communicate."

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Also,
                          Will an inductive timing light, clamped around each plug wire, one at a time work on an 11? Anybody ever try this before?

                          It's a great test tool for vehicles to determine if it's fuel or ignition causing the problem. Never tried it on an 11 before.
                          I know the 11 uses a dual "waste-spark" type coil system...
                          So not sure.

                          If it would work, you should be able to see a correlation with missing light pulses occurring when the engine misses.

                          I know on car ignitions, it's a quick way of telling if the problem's fuel or ignition.

                          Someone more knowledgable than me might know the answer...

                          JAT
                          '82 XJ1100J Maxim (has been sold.)

                          '79 F "Time Machine"... oh yeah, Baby.... (Sold back to Maximan)

                          2011 Kaw Concours 14 ABS

                          In the warden's words from Cool Hand Luke;
                          "What we have here is a failure to communicate."

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            Hi Rob

                            Been a while since I've seen you. Check the diaphram for holes in that #2 carb or at least verify the lip is seated properly.
                            Did you get the Katana restored? Hope to see you at next years rally. Coming up to Ottawa next Friday to drop my daughter off at Carleton U. Pm me your address again, I know your close so I could drop by and have a listen. I can bring a set of known carbs with me for you to try. Then we'd know if it's carbs or ignition. You could chase your tail for weeks. I busted my right hand so wrenching is out for me but sometimes two heads.......
                            mack
                            79 XS 1100 SF Special
                            HERMES
                            original owner
                            http://i946.photobucket.com/albums/a...ps6932d5df.jpg

                            81 XS 1100 LH MNS
                            SPICA
                            http://i946.photobucket.com/albums/ad305/mack-055/2.jpg

                            78 XS 11E
                            IOTA
                            https://youtu.be/wB5Jfbp6SUc
                            https://youtu.be/RaI3WYHSuWA



                            Have recovery trailer and shop if you breakdown in my area.
                            Frankford, Ont, Canada
                            613-398-6186

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Originally posted by XJOK2PLAY View Post
                              Also,
                              Will an inductive timing light, clamped around each plug wire, one at a time work on an 11? Anybody ever try this before?
                              I have tried this and it does work well for finding a misfire. You can usually hear the misfire and see the light missing pulses when you find the problem cylinder.
                              Last edited by bikerphil; 08-19-2014, 09:13 AM.
                              2H7 (79) owned since '89
                              3H3 owned since '06

                              "If it ain't broke, modify it"

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Originally posted by bikerphil View Post
                                I have tried this and it does work well for finding a misfire. You can usually hear the misfire and see the light missing pulses when you find the problem cylinder.
                                IF the problem is in the coil or wire.
                                Greg

                                Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”

                                ― Albert Einstein

                                80 SG Ol' Okie;79 engine & carbs w/pods, 45 pilots, 140 mains, Custom Mac 4 into 2 exhaust, ACCT,XS850 final drive,110/90/19 front tire,TKat fork brace, XS750 140 MPH speedometer, Vetter IV fairing, aftermarket hard bags and trunk, LG high back seat, XJ rear shocks.

                                The list changes.

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