Ok. Time for a story now. I put the carbs back to the plate. Screwed them on there and used some locktite. Then I found out I forgot a part. Quite the important part as well: the part were the throttle cable attaches on to. And there was no possible way to squirm it past the carbs. So, I needed to unscrew the carbs again. Here I learned a valuable life lessson:
Dont Underestimate The Power Of Locktite...
So the back of the bottle said it was supposed to dry in about 15 minutes. It actually did the job in about a minute and I had myself a problem. Some screws came out. One screw absolutely didn't on carb three (exactly the one I needed to remove to put the throttle attachment in there).
So, I tried heating it up a bit with a soldering iron. No go. Hairdryer? No go. Heat gun? No go. At this point, the philips head was gone and left a perfectly round hole on top. Lesson two learned:
Buy an impact driver before you need an impact driver!
Next day I came back with the new impact driver and a dremel. I made a flat driver slot with the engraving tool, careful not to get any metal parts in the carb and got the impact driver in. Two hits was all it took:
Thats what I was left with.
I decided to buy 8 new screws like that and just keep the old one as spares.
After this, I put it back together the
right way. Then, whilst tightening the bolt on carb one which attaches the throttle valve pivot to the throttle shaft, I found that bolt kept on turning. Apparently, my torque wrench didn't click and I broke of the bolt, leaving part of the bolt in the throttle shaft (ofcourse...).
Again, time for the dremel: I put the carbs in a position, so the metal filings wouldnt go into the carbs, got the engraving tool and carefully took of the top of the bolt still left in the shaft, without trying to damage the pivot or shaft ofcourse. About an hour later I finally got the shaft out of the carbs and was able to try and get the rest of the bolt out. I had to drill right through it and take it out afterwards with a lefthanded drill. After taking the bolt out, I saw that I (fortunately) didn't go through the side of the bolt and didn't damage the shaft. Lucky me.
So I changed my order for the other screws and put in an extra bolt.
After this, I checked the torque wrench, which apparently wasn't yet greased up enough for the mechanism to work. After this it worked as it's supposed to and the other bolts weren't a problem. Lesson three learned: check your tools.
I expect the last of the gaskets to arrive next week. The airbox is almost airtight again and the carbs only need a few screws to arrive. Hopefully the bike will be running again in two weeks.
Which would be a great thing. I just crashed my newer bike last Friday. Driver in front of me hit the brakes mid-turn on a crossing with no reason. Had to hit my brakes as well and tipped over. The driver in front of me just rode on. Hopefully the insurance company will cover the repair, but i'm afraid they won't in this case. The others at the crossing weren't able to see the license plate.