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Mixture screws stopped working? Idles best with screws all the way in?

  • Thread starter Thread starter system9
  • Start date Start date
The carb boots, to my recollection, are about 4 years old? I am almost sure I replaced them when I got the bike. But I have had a few bikes, and I'm getting old, so I'm not exactly sure. I checked them with the bike running by spraying some carb cleaner all around the boots, no change in rpm, I know thats not a definitive test, Today I will take the boots off and inspect them, also swap them and see if the issue moves with the boots.
The valves were done also about 4 or 5 years ago, but that is the only thing I didn't do personally. My son had a class at Washtenaw community college motorcycle program, he took it there and did it. But could be a bad valve. I'm also going to do a compression test today. I'll let you know what I find out. Thanks.
 
SOLVED!
Ok, this is the madness. It goes back to the concave brass floats. SOmething had caused my floats to kind of implode. They aren't broken, but somehow the weather or some weird air pressure issue caused them to compress a bit. This was causing the left carb especially to be rich, which is why it was best with the screw all the way in. I didn't suspect the floats initially, because why would floats suddenly change shape? So after I ruled out the mixture screw itself, I decided to re-set the floats to 22-23 mm based on the advice of some people. I also decided to put in some different pilot jets, to rule that out, so I grabbed some 17.5 pilots and put them in. After that the fuel was spilling out. At this point I decided to use the clear hose method attached to the bowl cap to get an actual float reading with the carbs on. They were waay off. I set them correctly, hoping all would be good. Final measurement was around 26mm. So carbs back on, no fuel overflowing, floats are great, But the bike is still idling best with the damn screw all the way in. I remove the carb boots, clean them check for cracks, they look good. I remove the choke mechanisms from the carbs, check them for leaks, they look good, and then I swap the carb boots and the choke mechanisms to see if the problem moves with them. Carbs back on, still idles best with mixture screw all the way in. I'm just staring at the bike in dismay. I decide to check the plugs again, and I notice they are dark! They have always been tan, never ever this dark. And they are both dark. Now I'm really confused, cause the floats are great, I have put in even smaller stock 17.5 pilot jets, and the screws are all the way in. I think, damn, I'm going to have to put in pilots that are smaller than stock? So i go to my jet drawer ( I have a lot of projects) and while I'm searching I come across a pair of 17.5 pilots. Same as what I already have in the bike now. And then I'm looking at them, and I think to myself "Why do I have 2 pair of 17.5?" cause these are the stock size pilots. I remove the carbs, take out a pilot and look at it. Really squint and look and I realize what happened. I had recently been tuning a Yamaha xs650. It uses the same style pilots. What I thought said 17.5, was actually stamped with a very faint 27.5!
So what I did was solve the original and probably only problem, which was the incorrect float level due to the misshapen floats. But in my attempt to return the carb jets to stock for further testing, I created another problem with similar symptoms at the exact same time I fixed the first problem, that was putting in pilots that were too large! I'm a super dingbat!! On the plus side, when I put the real 17.5 pilots in, the bike ran like a bat out of hell again. So, why would the bike idle best with the mixture screw all the way in? When the floats are sitting too low, and also when your pilot jet is too large.
 
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Good news and an easy fix?I have found my "ingenuity" has often lead me down strange paths.
 
Thanks for documenting the whole process. Strange that the floats would change shape like that. Maybe something to do with temperature swings when the bike was stored and the age of the floats.
 
I live in Michigan. The temperature can go from 30˚ to 60˚f in 12 hours sometimes. I can only guess air pressure did that to the floats, as they seem very evenly compressed, both sets.
 
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