Hi all,
I bought my XS1100F a couple of months ago, I got it cheap as it
did not run well in the range from just above idle until about a quarter of full throttle. The previous owner dismantled the carbs, had someone clean them but failed to get the bike running right. Having read other posts in this forum made me suspect that there might be trouble with the float valves. However, it turned out to be difficult to measure the different levels around the floats as my bike is equipped with float bowls with plain bolts (no nipples), nothing to attach those clever tubes you guys use to measure the adjustment of the floats.
So I thought that I might be able to at least check that the float valves manage to close the fuel supply by removing the bowls, closing the float valves by hand and then opening the fuel lines. The result of this experiment? Me experiencing fuel running down the shirt sleeves while I'm shouting "shut off! shut off!" to my daughter who was on petcock detail, that's what happened. It seems that all four carbs gushed despite me keeping the floats at top level. Now for my question, are there any other routes for fuel to enter the carburettors apart from the float valves, or was this a successful test setup? Since it's strange that all four floats should fail at once, is there a faulty way to assemble the carbs that would make them behave like this?
Regarding the bolt in the bowls, a post said that bleeder nipples might fit. Now, the float bowl bolts on my bike seem to be UNF 5/16, not M8, is that correct? Seems strange that the Japs wouldn't use metric bolts...
Regards,
/Jan
I bought my XS1100F a couple of months ago, I got it cheap as it
did not run well in the range from just above idle until about a quarter of full throttle. The previous owner dismantled the carbs, had someone clean them but failed to get the bike running right. Having read other posts in this forum made me suspect that there might be trouble with the float valves. However, it turned out to be difficult to measure the different levels around the floats as my bike is equipped with float bowls with plain bolts (no nipples), nothing to attach those clever tubes you guys use to measure the adjustment of the floats.
So I thought that I might be able to at least check that the float valves manage to close the fuel supply by removing the bowls, closing the float valves by hand and then opening the fuel lines. The result of this experiment? Me experiencing fuel running down the shirt sleeves while I'm shouting "shut off! shut off!" to my daughter who was on petcock detail, that's what happened. It seems that all four carbs gushed despite me keeping the floats at top level. Now for my question, are there any other routes for fuel to enter the carburettors apart from the float valves, or was this a successful test setup? Since it's strange that all four floats should fail at once, is there a faulty way to assemble the carbs that would make them behave like this?
Regarding the bolt in the bowls, a post said that bleeder nipples might fit. Now, the float bowl bolts on my bike seem to be UNF 5/16, not M8, is that correct? Seems strange that the Japs wouldn't use metric bolts...
Regards,
/Jan
Comment