Steve
GS Whisperer
If the bike is on 'choke', opening the throttle will defeat the enrichment process and yes, it will be lean. Basically, when you are on 'choke', you adjust the idle speed with the 'choke' lever, not the throttle.I'm also wondering if the bike dies when I open the throttle because it receives a ton of air but no fuel (because the needles are not lifting very well) this would also mimic a lean mixture...right?
Personally, I think you do have a timing issue, but it's not electrical timing. In the flurry of posts above, you mentioned something about valve adjustment, but I don't really remember if you have done it or not. If you haven't, don't even worry about tuning carbs until you have the valves done. Tight valves (especially intakes) will play havoc with the way the bike runs, especially how well it starts when cold. If you do the carbs first, you will have to re-adjust them after you adjust the valves (unless all the valves are in spec and you don't have to change anything).Would any of this cause the bike to spit and sputter from the carbs? Just checking because this backfire makes me wonder if I have a timing issue (though I have checked and double checked the timing), or an electrical issue.
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