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Just get new petcock and move on to other stuff- there will be plenty of fun ,like carb removal and proper cleaning. How does the inside of your fuel tank look after barn sitting?
"My 15A fuse that's connected to the RR and ignition switch gets hot when I'm turning the bike over"
Are you talking about the main 15 amp in fusebox or something added between R/R and somewhere ? During cranking (before charging system kicks in) the main fuse is sorta maxed out especially with bike that can't shutoff headlights.
Hooray for carb cleaning!
Keep enjoying that wishful thinking.I just finished a proper cleaning of the carbs last week.(yes a full teardown and soaking them in carb dip and new orings from robertbarr) So I'd better not have to do that again just yet.
Keep enjoying that wishful thinking.
Although you have apparently done all the right stuff with the carbs and your tank appears to be clean, don't rule out the possibility that some stray piece of crud will find its way through.
What I am saying is: if you do end up with a problem that seems to be in the pilot circuit, don't simply say "it can't be, I cleaned the carbs". Go ahead, pull the carbs (again), remove the pilot jets and give a quick squirt of carb cleaner spray and compressed air in the reverse direction to normal flow.
Can't tell you how many times I have had to do that, so it's not all that uncommon.
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Yeah, no fun, but as Steve pointed out, stuff happens. Hopefully, you'll get lucky. and hopefully you paid attention to enricher circuit (aka "choke") in each carb. If that little hole in fuel bowl bottom gets gunked up, stuff can get pulled up into that little tube and onward into carb throat passages making for hard cold starts.Good to know. I'll keep it in mind. Although I hope I don't have to. These carbs are a PITA to get off the bike which barely any clearance between the frame and the airbox.
Also, it is not a bad idea to unplug the headlight while doing this work. Just remove it and set it aside until you are done.
Also, it is not a bad idea to unplug the headlight while doing this work. Just remove it and set it aside until you are done.
Yes, you may question "why?". The quick answer is that you will not be loading down the battery and electrical system while you are doing other testing or trying to start the bike. Until you are ready to hit the road, you really don't need the light.I'll take this advice. But may I question why?
Not sure what your thinking is there, but you are correct, each coil fires two cylinders at a time, every time the crank comes around.Also. I assume these bikes fire two cylinders at a time and not 4 separate times. So if it was a misaligned camshaft shouldn't I have bad compression in two cylinders?
Technically true, but don't confuse him, Tom.Nope, the cylinders fire one at a time.
Slipping a camshaft would affect ALL the cylinders, not just one or two.
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I think the factory recommended a minimum of about 100, but general practice says that the lowest and the highest should only be 10-20% apart. A 20% drop from your reported 125-130 would put you right at 100, but you said you had only 65.
Personally, I would add a bit of oil (a teaspoon or two) to all the cylinders and try a compression test again. If it goes up (especially on the low one), your rings are where the compression is getting lost, not the valves. That is actually not all that uncommon in an engine that has not been run for a few years.
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