T
terry
Guest
Ive owned a 1980 GS1000ST for the last 3 or 4 years, it was stock when I bought it, but I've since added Yoshimura 1100 pistons (approx 11.5 to 1 comp) Yoshimura stage 2 cams and heavy duty valve springs and a Megacycle pipe in the last 12 months or so. Initially I had problems with plugs fouling, but I've since fixed that by replacing the old coils with new suzuki items. (it's got the factory electronic ignition, and my dealer tells me that these rarely gave any trouble) I probably should have bought dyna or accel coils, but the suzy items were cheap and seem to work ok. The trouble is it still seems to be running rich. I've dropped the needles one notch from the centre position (33mm factory Mikuni slide carbs) and am picking up a "high flow" foam air filter this week as well, and looking at my old Yoshimura catalogue, they mention that the air filter box should have some extra holes punched in it to allow better air flow. My question is, has anybody out there in GS land tried this, and where's the best place to punch the holes. I've looked at my airbox and there are already 2 "quarter" sized holes already punched in it from the factory, are these sufficient, or do I need some more? Would leaving the lid off (the new filter is an "oiled foam" type) have the same effect? Apart from running rich across the rev range, it goes like stink, and will rev to 12000 RPM in 3rd gear (that was at 120 MPH and I decided that I didn't need to explore it's outer limits) with the standard 15/45 gearing. I run it on Shell Optimax 98 RON unleaded, which is the best I can buy here in Australia without going one step further and buying aviation fuel. The carbs came off another GS1000ST I own (I have three, plus a GS750) which is stock except for a megacycle pipe, and the donor bike didn't run rich when I rode it before the carb swap. :twisted: