BTW, I sure got confused between metric/English clearences (.003” compared with .03mm) and messed up Steve’s spreadsheet by entering
.003 thousandths of an inch instead of
3 thousandths of an inch. The effect was that it seemed like all my clearances were in the millionths of an inch, and, of course, that meant I needed 8 shims when in reality .003” is well within spec. The spreadsheet works great when you follow the directions, and when I re-entered the measurements properly I only needed one shim which I was able to swap at a local shop for $0. I guess I’ll hang on to the ones I ordered from Z1 for future adjustments.
OK, the
big news is that the airbox work seems to have done the trick on the popping, lost power, slow idle, and occasional white smoke during warm up. As a bonus, between that and the new battery, starting is a breeze. I had been goosing the throttle to get it to catch, but this morning I used choke and no throttle and it caught the first time. Could be my imagination, but I think throttle response is smoother too. I feel like it got choppy on deceleration for a while now, and I think it’s back to normal.
pics
here for the airbox hacking/fixup...
Thanks go to 49er for the tip about the breather galley thing. I didn’t even see that when I was cleaning originally, and when I ran the coat hanger wire through there I ended up with about two tablespoons worth of rusty gunk. Yikes! I sprayed a little PB Blaster up there after cleaning, hoping to slow the return of more rust. Based on the volume of crud it’s likely that the breather was restricted, and I’m hoping my oil seals will get a nice break now that the breather can once again, well... breathe.
I struggled with getting the airbox back on, but only for about 3 minutes. After all I’d read about the
magic moment of reassembling the airbox to the carb with
new boots, I knew something had to be wrong. I’d installed left and right boots “Letter Up” as advised in this forum, but trying to get them hooked up made me think maybe that was backwards, since two boots on one side went fine and the other two were visibly not aligned. Upon closer inspection, I noticed that there was a Braille-like raised dot on the flange of each boot. Then I noticed four identical raised dots on the airbox – one under each hole. Those clever engineers! I spun the boots “Letters down” to align the dots, tried again on the carbs, and got to experience my own “magic moment” when they popped right on.
Anyway, a successful fix, and in the meantime I adjusted my valves, replaced my fuel petcock and fuel line, and changed my gear oils (None too soon on that gear oil – they looked pretty yucky. And I made a mess despite Basscliff’s great pictorial). Next step – carb rebuild!
Thanks fellas!