Well, it's been a few weeks since I posted, so I figured I'd write up an update about the reviving of my '80 SG.
The bike sat outside for over 7 years, and was a rusted heap when I got it. Thankfully Ebay has provided well. After a TON of rust removal, some repainting, and a lot of restorative-type work, I've finally gotten it ready to attempt to start. Alas it will not. It cranks, but will not start. I get no spark at the plugs.
I had cleaned out the fuse panel earlier (was a MESS), and cleaned all the terminals, none of which were making a connection. Got lights and starter functions after that.
After poking around on the site, it seems the first place to look is the tilt switch. This site has been a wealth of information during this process....I can't imagine how I could've gotten this far without it!
There are so many things that arent covered in the (Clymer)manual. Like a troubleshooting guide that actually is worth a crap. Or simple stuff like what direction of the petcock valves is supposed to be (handle over the function!). Amazing...
I also learned something else...don't lay a very shiney and near perfect front fender on the wheel then absent mindedly push the bike forward, rolling over it. It will ruin it completely.
The 2 and a half days I spent rebuilding the carbs was not long enough it appears, as the #1 carb was pouring gas out of the boot to the airbox. I think I've got a stuck float. At least I replaced all the screws on the carbs with SS allen heads. Getting them apart originally was a total pain. The #1 carb is actually a #3 carb with the top tube plugged, and a standard butterfly plate instead of the slotted one. It appeared correct otherwise? I broke one of the float pin pegs on one of the #1 carbs I had, and broke the corner off of the diaphragm bowl on the other. Much to my dismay. Gummed up carbs suck
Should I assume gas got in the intake as well trying to crank it, ruining 3.75 qts of fresh oil? That would really stink.
The bike sat outside for over 7 years, and was a rusted heap when I got it. Thankfully Ebay has provided well. After a TON of rust removal, some repainting, and a lot of restorative-type work, I've finally gotten it ready to attempt to start. Alas it will not. It cranks, but will not start. I get no spark at the plugs.
I had cleaned out the fuse panel earlier (was a MESS), and cleaned all the terminals, none of which were making a connection. Got lights and starter functions after that.
After poking around on the site, it seems the first place to look is the tilt switch. This site has been a wealth of information during this process....I can't imagine how I could've gotten this far without it!
There are so many things that arent covered in the (Clymer)manual. Like a troubleshooting guide that actually is worth a crap. Or simple stuff like what direction of the petcock valves is supposed to be (handle over the function!). Amazing...
I also learned something else...don't lay a very shiney and near perfect front fender on the wheel then absent mindedly push the bike forward, rolling over it. It will ruin it completely.
The 2 and a half days I spent rebuilding the carbs was not long enough it appears, as the #1 carb was pouring gas out of the boot to the airbox. I think I've got a stuck float. At least I replaced all the screws on the carbs with SS allen heads. Getting them apart originally was a total pain. The #1 carb is actually a #3 carb with the top tube plugged, and a standard butterfly plate instead of the slotted one. It appeared correct otherwise? I broke one of the float pin pegs on one of the #1 carbs I had, and broke the corner off of the diaphragm bowl on the other. Much to my dismay. Gummed up carbs suck
Should I assume gas got in the intake as well trying to crank it, ruining 3.75 qts of fresh oil? That would really stink.
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