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Crooked Slide Needle

Mr.Vroom

Forum Apprentice
Hi everybody, I was recently cleaning and installing a kit into my carbs for my 1980 GS250 ( I'm fairly sure I'm going to have to reinstall all the stock parts) and I noticed that the slide needle does not sit into the slide as it should. It sits at a slight angle. The plastic retainers in the slide both have a little bump on them where they contact the needle. You can see this in the shadow caused by the flash in the attached picture. Also, the bike only runs with the choke on. I've reinstalled the original piolet screws and set them to where they were at before. The bike still runs very poorly, do I have to reinstall the original piolet jet?​
 

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Those who have been around rehabbing old bikes for awhile will all tell you the same thing, toss out the hardware that comes with a carb rebuild kit and stick with the original parts! Even the o-rings and gaskets can sometimes be not quite right, it's best to stick with genuine Mikuni parts. Sounds like your thinking is on the right track, go back to the original carb innards.
 
If the bike only runs on choke, your carbs not clean, time to do it again.

V
 
There is a spring under the needle, which allows it to float side to side and up and down somewhat. You have to guide the needle down into the center of the Jet Needle, and then the needle will be captured in the passage. Also, that plastic cap piece only fits one way. Make sure you don't have it misaligned before putting the C-clip in.
 
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There is a spring under the needle, which allows it to float side to side and up and down somewhat. You have to guide the needle down into the center of the Jet Needle, and then the needle will be captured in the passage. Also, that plastic cap piece only fits one way. Make sure you don't have it misaligned before putting the C-clip in.

The slide needle does go into the needle jet nicely, but I'm worried that with the slight angle the needle will wear. The plastic caps are installed in the proper orientation, but I think that the little bump on the plastic caps is what's causing the slight angle. My question now is should I shave off the little bump?
 
The slide needle does go into the needle jet nicely, but I'm worried that with the slight angle the needle will wear. The plastic caps are installed in the proper orientation, but I think that the little bump on the plastic caps is what's causing the slight angle. My question now is should I shave off the little bump?

No, don't reengineer the bike.

Do you have the spring under the needle, and a small plastic spacer on top of the C-clip? If you do, and the needle moves slightly, don't worry about it.
 
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Hi everybody, I was recently cleaning and installing a kit into my carbs for my 1980 GS250 ( I'm fairly sure I'm going to have to reinstall all the stock parts) and I noticed that the slide needle does not sit into the slide as it should. It sits at a slight angle. The plastic retainers in the slide both have a little bump on them where they contact the needle. You can see this in the shadow caused by the flash in the attached picture. Also, the bike only runs with the choke on. I've reinstalled the original piolet screws and set them to where they were at before. The bike still runs very poorly, do I have to reinstall the original piolet jet?​

The spring loading of the needle at an angle is a design feature and is normal. The spring and bump in the plastic cap preloads the needle at an angle and stops it from rattling around in the needle jet. Remember the flow through the carb is stop-start with only 1 stroke out of 4 being intake, so there will be a flow reversals at low RPM, and air flow though the carb even at WFO is 'lumpy'.

The needles and jets do wear over (a long) time. If you think about it, the needle is under sideways pressure from the air flow through the carburetor and would be pushed against the aperture of the jet anyway. I can't remember which direction they angle to, but its uniform across all the slides and probably against the direction of air flow into the engine to counteract this loading to minimize wear. Worn needle jets, BTW have an oval/egg shaped hole where the needle sits, and cause just off idle (1/16th - 1/8th throttle) richness that you can't dial out with the pilot screw, and make the bike a bitch to ride around town. I've had this problem before.

If the bike is only idling on the choke, there's a couple of things to look at (assuming Mikuni CVs)

Idle speed knob. The choke is actually a self-contained mini-carburetor that is cast into the main carb body, and provides a rich start mixture when opened. As such has its own air intake under the diaphragm through from the carb bell mouth and fuel directly from the float bowl, so it operates independently of the main throttle butterflies, pilot and main circuits.

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The warm idle speed is set by the Idle Speed knob between the carbs. It cracks open the butterflies to bleed enough air though the carb to keep the engine ticking over via the pilot circuit, when the choke is off. So if the idle knob isn't open enough the engine will run on choke but die when its shut. Try progressively screwing in the idle speed knob to see if this allows the engine to hold a normal idle. If it can only hold a high idle like 2000-3000 rpm, the problem isn't the knob position.

Pilot Circuit. This is the pilot jet, the pilot air jet, the pilot mixture screw and pilot orifice into the venturi, the adjacent bypass orifices under the closed butterfly plate and all the inter connecting passage ways that join it all together.

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All of these parts/passages have to be surgically clean. Any sediment, grit, gum, dirt, etc. will stop the pilot circuit from operating correctly and you spend a lot of time on a motorcycle on public roads is running on the pilot circuit. Make sure the pilot jet you replaced has exactly the same Mikuni part number and square in a square symbol stamped on the side as the one you swapped out.. I'm assuming you haven't disturbed the pilot air jet. Make sure you can pass aerosol carb cleaner through the pilot circuit. Squirt it in though the pilot air jet in the bell mouth. If should come out past the pilot screw, and out of the nearby small bypass holes as we as out of the pilot jet. Spray it up the pilot jet, and it should come out the air jet and the pilot and bypass orifices. If carb cleaner can't get through, air and fuel can't either. Make sure that you haven't inadvertently broken the pilot crew needle tips off by over-tight seating of the screw. Easy to do.

If the pilot circuit is confirmed as being unclogged, then the next thing is to recheck the pilot screw settings. Lightly seat the screws and then go out 1 ? to 1 ? as a baseline.

Once you get it running and fully warmed up you can fine tune the pilot mixture screws for best idle mixture.
 
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Sorry for the delay. But I replaced all the kit pieces with the original ones, and there was no change in performance. SO the carbs are going back into the ultrasonic cleaner.
 
I was using slightly diluted pine-sol original formula for my carbs. I got busy and forgot about them. It seems that the pine-sol etched the aluminum? Is that going to mess up my carbs?
 
I was using slightly diluted pine-sol original formula for my carbs. I got busy and forgot about them. It seems that the pine-sol etched the aluminum? Is that going to mess up my carbs?

Probably not. The carbs are a zinc alloy. I've had a set that discolored during chemical cleaning and no ill effects. The chemical reaction is on the surface and will be microns thin. Post a photo of yours.

BTW, you can pre-set the pilot mixture screws before you put the carbs on the bike. This way you can actually confirm they have seated by looking at needle tip looking up at it in the carb bore.

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The needle tip will become visible in the lone orifice nearest the end of the carb bore. The three others are the bypass orifices. These are metered by the pilot jet and pilot air jet and aren't affected by the pilot mixture screw. These add more mixture as you open the throttle just off idle.
 
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Even if the solution did etch some aluminum it seems to have had no effect. I thought that the aluminum was damaged because the carb was covered in a grey sludge. But I installed the carbs back into the bike with all the original parts, and it seems to be running a little better. I first took the carbs out to be cleaned because my left cylinder was cutting out at around 7000 RPM. I swapped all electrical components with the other side that does not cut out; there was no change in performance. So now I'm officially stumped.
 

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Probably not. The carbs are a zinc alloy. I've had a set that discolored during chemical cleaning and no ill effects. The chemical reaction is on the surface and will be microns thin. Post a photo of yours.

Sorry to nick pick, but the VM carb bodies are zinc, but the CV type are aluminum. Zinc darkens easily, but aluminum doesn't.
 
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