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    New GS750ES owner

    First post to introduce myself. I became the owner of a 1983 GS750ES today. I have been riding for about 9 months now and started on a 2007 Ninja 250 last year. This is my second bike and I am excited about getting it looked over by a mechanic and getting it up into the mountains.

    IMG_20160124_151405744_HDR.jpg

    #2
    Welcome to the fun house. Great looking ES. Good luck with it.
    sigpic
    When consulting the magic 8 ball for advice, one must first ask it "will your answers be accurate?"

    Glen
    -85 1150 es - Plus size supermodel.
    -Rusty old scooter.
    Other things I like to photograph.....instagram.com/gs_junkie
    https://www.instagram.com/glen_brenner/
    https://www.flickr.com/photos/152267...7713345317771/

    Comment


      #3
      Pretty bike. Welcome to the ES family.
      83 GS1100ES rebuild:

      http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=170032

      Budget GSXR Conversion:

      http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=200563

      New to me bike: 2008 B-KING

      Comment


        #4
        Great looking bike, congratulations.

        Comment


          #5
          Wow, very nice ES. Go easy on it, it has a fair bit more oomph than that 250 you're used to.

          You might reconsider the mechanic option. If you can even find a mechanic that works on vintage bikes, it's going to cost you an arm and a leg, and they are more likely than not to mess something up, or miss something important.

          Around here, we strongly advocate being your own mechanic. It's not hard and does not take many tools. Doesn't even take much time. Mostly it takes the willingness to learn about your machine. Bikes are much less complicated than cars but its much more important that they work properly. To get started, see the link to the mega-welcome in my signature.
          Charles
          --
          1979 Suzuki GS850G

          Read BassCliff's GSR Greeting and Mega-Welcome!

          Comment


            #6
            Nice bike. Of all the bikes I have owned or would like to own, that model, imo is one of the best looking bikes ever.
            Current Rides: 82 GS1100E, 00 Triumph 955 Speed Triple, 03 Kawasaki ZRX1200, 01 Honda GL1800, '15 Kawasaki 1000 Versys
            Past Rides: 72 Honda SL-125, Kawasaki KE-175, 77 GS750 with total yosh stage 1 kit, 79 GS1000s, 80 GS1000S, 82 GS750e,82 GS1000S, 84 VF500f, 86 FZR600, 95 Triumph Sprint 900,96 Triumph Sprint, 97 Triumph Sprint, 01 Kawasaki ZRX1200, 07 Triumph Tiger 1050, 01 Yam YFZ250F
            Work in progress: 78 GS1000, unknown year GS1100ES

            Comment


              #7
              I've owned mine since i took it out of the crate it came in. If you have any questions, PM me and i'd be more than happy to answer them.
              Last edited by kingofvenus; 01-25-2016, 07:57 PM.
              Dee Durant '83 750es (Overly molested...) '88 gl1500 (Yep, a wing...)

              Comment


                #8
                Nice looking ride.Still in love with my 85 EF after 5 years

                Comment


                  #9


                  sigpic
                  When consulting the magic 8 ball for advice, one must first ask it "will your answers be accurate?"

                  Glen
                  -85 1150 es - Plus size supermodel.
                  -Rusty old scooter.
                  Other things I like to photograph.....instagram.com/gs_junkie
                  https://www.instagram.com/glen_brenner/
                  https://www.flickr.com/photos/152267...7713345317771/

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Thanks for the welcome, everyone. I really like the style and the feel of this bike and have gotten some nice compliments riding it the past couple days.

                    Originally posted by eil View Post
                    Wow, very nice ES. Go easy on it, it has a fair bit more oomph than that 250 you're used to.

                    You might reconsider the mechanic option. If you can even find a mechanic that works on vintage bikes, it's going to cost you an arm and a leg, and they are more likely than not to mess something up, or miss something important.

                    Around here, we strongly advocate being your own mechanic. It's not hard and does not take many tools. Doesn't even take much time. Mostly it takes the willingness to learn about your machine. Bikes are much less complicated than cars but its much more important that they work properly. To get started, see the link to the mega-welcome in my signature.
                    I want to use this opportunity to learn. The bike came with the service manual. I've been reading through it and through this forum and learning a lot. I've done very little work on cars and motorcycles before.

                    There is some hesitation at low RPMs and a kind of stutter at freeway speeds. I took the bike to a guy with a good reputation in town to have the 12-year-old tires changed. He thought the main carbs are dirty and wanted to do valve adjustment, carb clean and carb sync. I told him I want to learn and he listened and gave some other pointers.

                    Today I replaced all spark plugs and did the valve adjustment. Clearance was way out of spec (<0.05mm for all valves). Tomorrow I will pull and clean all the carbs. Is it likely I'll need to rebuild carbs? After I get the carbs sorted out, I'll either take it back to him for sync or I'll try to build one of the DIY sync tools. I like this tutorial: https://youtu.be/GaTRyHxvneY

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Sounds like a solid plan. What I would do is rebuild the carbs yourself exactly as described in the guide(s) on BassCliff's site and then take them into the mechanic to have them synced and ask him to show you how. Then when you have the cash, buy the Morgan Carbtune Pro direct from the UK. It's a little spendy (little more than $100 USD last I looked) but its awesome and it'll last you forever.

                      I don't know what the air intake setup is like on the 750ES, but make sure the path is well sealed, the filter is clean, and your carb boots are nice and bendy.
                      Charles
                      --
                      1979 Suzuki GS850G

                      Read BassCliff's GSR Greeting and Mega-Welcome!

                      Comment


                        #12
                        I have the carbs off now. The Mikuni rebuild tutorial link is dead: http://www.mtsac.edu/%7Ecliff/storage/gs/Mikuni_BS-CV_Carburetor_Rebuild_Tutorial.pdf

                        Any mirror available?

                        Comment


                          #13
                          The excellent CV carb rebuild is working for me. http://zeus.mtsac.edu/~cliff/storage...d_Tutorial.pdf
                          2@ \'78 GS1000

                          Comment


                            #14
                            One of the biggest causes for the stuttering that you describe is intake leakage. Make sure that you pick up some intake boot o-rings from Robert Barr here and replace them. I guarantee you they are hard as a rock and not sealing correctly.

                            Also, since you still have the stock airbox, it's going to be a bee-otch getting the carbs back in. Use a hair dryer to warm up the intake boots, and spray the insides of them with silicone spray before attempting to insert the carbs. That makes it A LOT easier.
                            sigpic

                            SUZUKI:
                            1978 GS1000E; 1980 GS1000G; 1982 GS650E; 1982 GS1100G; 1982 GS1100E; 1985 GS700ES
                            HONDA: 1981 CB900F Super Sport
                            KAWASAKI: 1981 KZ550A-2; 1984 ZX750A-2 (aka GPZ750); 1984 KZ700A-1
                            YAMAHA: 1983 XJ750RK Seca

                            Free speech is the foundation of an open society. Each time a society bans a word or phrase it deems “offensive”, it chips away at that very foundation upon which it was built.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Ok, that link works for me. Thank! This looks great.

                              I did a whole lot of pulling and swearing getting the carbs OUT last night. Thanks for the tip on getting them back in.

                              I'll try to get the carbs clean and get the bike running again tonight/tomorrow, then order the new O-rings and whatever I break doing this

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