As for Wired George, there is a wider range of opinion about him on this site, but from my experience, his rebuild work appears very meticulous, his carburetors function well and he seems to know his way around Japanese multicylinder bikes.
I want to say something here that needs to be said. Sorry to momentarily change this threads subject.
I got into it with him a while back. I did not mean for the whole thing to get as serious as it did. But I take some things seriously enough to say what's on my mind and stay with it when I know I'm right.
Negative things typed will always stand out more than positives and I understand that and how things can escalade.
George seems to be very capable as you say. I said the same thing in the other thread. I have no doubt he can clean and rebuild carbs just fine. He SHOULD have a good idea of where to start if asked to re-jet but I've found some of his past re-jetting advice to be way off based on proven/verified testing from myself and other members here. I've read some other threads from him in the past and he has some good experience to share. George apparently has a pretty good business going by doing carb work. He wants to make money and there's nothing wrong with that.
I also have experience with carbs. He says he's rebuilt more of them than me and I would assume, running a business, he's right. That doesn't mean he does it any better than me or someone else. At some point, you don't get better, maybe faster? Whatever. The main difference between us is that I try to get others to do their own work. You can see how this is against his interests.
My problem with him is that he misleads potential customers.
>He says he sends you carbs that are vacuum synched on a test bike. He's saying you won't need to vacuum synch them once they're on your bike. The adjustments will stay the same or close enough.
>Since mixture/pilot air/pilot fuel screw adjustments must be made before the vacuum synch, he's obviously saying that those adjustments too, will be good on your bike even though they were also determined on a test bike.
>He also says any jetting or RE-JETTING is installed and then tested on his test bike. This jetting should/will work on your bike, with the emphasis on will.
I find the three above statements to be misleading and ridiculous. You cannot accurately do any of the above unless the carbs are on YOUR bike with your particular set up/engine condition/elevation/climate conditions. You can guess but no more than that. You have to test instead of taking anyones word for fact.
I see why he advertises this way.
His potential customer is mainly inexperienced owners. They don't feel comfortable doing their own carb work, be it cleaning, rebuilding, or jetting.
If the owner realized that the carbs, after he's set them up, may very well STILL need an accurate vacuum synch, accurate tuning screw adjustments, changes to the jetting, possible float level changes, etc.....
that owner may decide "what the heck, if there's a good chance I have to do those things anyway then I might a well try the cleaning and rebuild too". George doesn't want that obviously.
Many owners are on a budget and figure they're saving the price of a vacuum gauge when they try to decide what to do. I'm here to say that they'll need that vacuum gauge or have the bike synched at a good shop if they want the bike to run its best, not just good enough.
George should send you clean and rebuilt carbs. The jetting/adjustments will be guessed at from his experience. When you install them on your bike, your bike may very well run better than it did. It also may be the first time your bike has run at all. It may need minor adjustments, it may need much more than that. You may feel the bike runs great but if you have no experience with a bike like yours, in correct tune, how do you know? Because it doesn't stall? It doesn't spit out the carbs? It warms up fine and idles OK? It doesn't pop? It gets good mileage?
You can have great mileage but what good is it if you're running very lean? You have to test before considering the bike tuned correctly. You cannot take someones word for fact. Not on this subject.
I just want people to make a decision based on truth, not misleading advertizing that tells them what they want to hear.
If that ticks someone off, then so be it.