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Need some advice for 77 gs550 owner.

  • Thread starter Thread starter johnhend
  • Start date Start date
I have some intake O-rings that size. Drop me a PM if you want some.:)
 
John

1. Robert may have the head/boot O ring. If not, try one of the many vendors listed on BassCliff's site
2. You did read your way thru BasssCliff's site, right??
3. Those Phillips heads in the middle of the intake boots are where you hook up the vacuum carb sync tool
4. The coil relay mods are basically all the same - get full 12V to the coils
5. Points - I'm surprised you can get any spark at all, generally, it's the condensors that cause poor spark,but it can also be corroded points or low voltage, I recommend putting in a Dyna S rather than spending all the $$ replacing points and condensors, much cheaper in the long run.
6. Yes, you have to change shims to adjust your valve clearances

To help us help you, do a couple of things:

a. Go to the User CP, put your bike and location in your signature. That way every time you post, members can see where you are and what bike we're talking about. You can add an avatar also, which for me is that little photo of me coming down Mt. Shasta on my 78.

b. Go to BassCliff's site (you have read it now, haven't you?) and read on how to post up pictures. Spend 5 minutes setting up Photobucket and learn how to show us pictures. We love pictures and, as the old saying goes, they're worth a thousand words.

Everything and every problem you are going to encounter working on your bike has already been experienced by several people here. They're glad to help you become experienced without all the possible bad mistakes one can make.
 
Thanks Big T, I'll post some pics as soon as I get the bike back.
 
By all means, get that bike back in the hands of someone who cares - you!

It looks like the Suzuki part number for the 28mm intake o-rings is 09280-28003, and they're about $2 each. They're on the air cleaner fiche for your bike.

I agree that in the long run, Dyna S is the way to go for you. But that's also $125, and might not help get the bike running at this point. You could sink about $270 into Dyna S, Dyna green coils, and plug wires, and pretty much not have to concern yourself with the ignition ever again. But then, we don't want to get you into too much trouble :D

I don't know of a good way to check spark with a multitester. You can check the coils using the ohmmeter: your primary should be about 5 ohms. Use the forum search function and surely you'll find some values for the secondary. You can also check to see how much voltage is coming in to the coils. If you're already ~12V, you're not going to get much out of a coil relay mod. This from BassCliff's site, electrical odds-n-ends section:

To test the coils put one probe of the multitester on each of the terminals on the primary side of the coil. You should get 3-5 ohms. Check the secondary windings by placing one probe into each of the plug wires coming from one coil. Those would be 2 & 3 from one coil and 1 & 4 for the other. You should get 30-50,000 ohms for stock coils and 15-20,000 for aftermarket.

Your primary should be at the 5ohm value because it's a points type ignition (assuming it's still stock).
 
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Okay, I got the bike back. It wouldn't start for the mechanic. Now it won't start for me. I think it's because the battery was worn down from the mechanic trying to start it combined with an already low spark. I took the tank off and looked at how the ignition wires were routed and they were wrong. Coil on left fed cylinder 1 and 3. Coil on right fed cylinder 2 and 4. That is how it was when I got cylinder's 3 and 4 to start and idle. Now I switched it over so coil on left feeds 1 and 4 and right coil feeds 2 and 3. Wouldn't start. Battery is on charge. Oh yeah, took off the cover to look at points and there is already a Dyna S electronic ignition installed.
 
Dyna S already installed? BONUS! :D

Yes, on my GS550 left feeds 1 and 4 and right feeds 2 and 3. More importantly, with a Dyna S the 1 and 4 coil should be grounded with the WHITE wire and the 2/3 coil the BLACK wire (from the 3-wire Dyna harness). The RED 12V feed for the Dyna can come off of either coil (the orange/white wire) or any other constant 12V source, it doesn't matter.

Don't charge the battery with more than 2A current. Use your voltmeter to ensure your orange/white coil wires are getting ~12V with the ignition on. If they're not the coil relay mod may help, if they already are don't bother. Instead of the coil relay mod, you could have a field day cleaning connectors, particularly around the ignition switch. That's usually where the voltage loss is.
 
Dyna S already installed? BONUS! :D

Yes, on my GS550 left feeds 1 and 4 and right feeds 2 and 3. More importantly, with a Dyna S the 1 and 4 coil should be grounded with the WHITE wire and the 2/3 coil the BLACK wire (from the 3-wire Dyna harness). The RED 12V feed for the Dyna can come off of either coil (the orange/white wire) or any other constant 12V source, it doesn't matter.

Don't charge the battery with more than 2A current. Use your voltmeter to ensure your orange/white coil wires are getting ~12V with the ignition on. If they're not the coil relay mod may help, if they already are don't bother. Instead of the coil relay mod, you could have a field day cleaning connectors, particularly around the ignition switch. That's usually where the voltage loss is.


Any idea how the right two cylinder were able to run with the ignition wires reversed like that?

Also, could the left to cylinders not start because of bad initial timing of the dyna s?
 
With the Dyna, whichever coil has the white ground is the one that runs cylinders 1 & 4. Position doesn't really matter so long as the wires reach. The PO might have gotten the grounds confused. Definitely check the wiring.

If the initial timing was that far off, 3 and 4 should have never run, either. The same module fires 1 and 4, and the other fires 2 and 3. If 3 is in time to run, then 2 should be too. It would be a good idea to borrow an inductive timing light and verify the timing from 1000 to 2500 RPM - though that requires a running bike. There's also a static timing procedure. You can go here:

http://www.dynaonline.com/skins/downloads/Default.aspx

select "Dyna S" from the drop-down, and get the installation instructions for the DS3-1 or DS3-2 to find that procedure. You probably also want to look at this helpful tidbit from Mr. Bwringer (lower pic):

http://www.bwringer.com/gs/tdc.html
 
I checked the wiring from the dyna s. The only potential problem that i can see is they splice the white and black dyna grounds and the red 12v wires going toward/into the ignition switch. So the dyna runs through the ignition switch and then back down to the coils. I measured the voltage on the charged battery and it read 13.4 volts. I measured the orange/white and ground going into the coils and I got 10.4. After reconnecting a bad connection, I got 11.35 at the coils.

Still no start. I can get it to pop and back fire with the choke on and petcock on prime but no start. It seems like I've got bad coils. Not sure what a really strong spark should look like though.
 
Splicing the Dyna wires in is pretty normal. With the points gone the other end of the wire goes to nothing.

A strong spark should be "fat" and blue. Weak spark would be thin and probably orange. I know that "fat" and "thin" are a bit subjective... Take your plugs out (are they wet w/fuel?), hook the wires back up, and lay the threads of the plugs against the head. Don't lay them right over top of the spark plug holes, where they might ignite something coming out. Then crank it over and see what you get. You were running on two cylinders so you would probably have at least two strong sparks.

Try putting a few drops of fuel in each cylinder before you put the plugs back in. See if that gets it a bit more active.

I know you said you have a 4-into-1. Is your bike still running a stock air box or do you have pods? Cleaning carbs - the right way - is the remedy for 95% of "GS has been sitting, now won't start" issues. The guy who looked at your bike said it had weak spark on two plugs but not sure I'd take him at his word on that. He didn't even notice that the plug wires were not in their proper places...
 
Splicing the Dyna wires in is pretty normal. With the points gone the other end of the wire goes to nothing.

A strong spark should be "fat" and blue. Weak spark would be thin and probably orange. I know that "fat" and "thin" are a bit subjective... Take your plugs out (are they wet w/fuel?), hook the wires back up, and lay the threads of the plugs against the head. Don't lay them right over top of the spark plug holes, where they might ignite something coming out. Then crank it over and see what you get. You were running on two cylinders so you would probably have at least two strong sparks.

Try putting a few drops of fuel in each cylinder before you put the plugs back in. See if that gets it a bit more active.

I know you said you have a 4-into-1. Is your bike still running a stock air box or do you have pods? Cleaning carbs - the right way - is the remedy for 95% of "GS has been sitting, now won't start" issues. The guy who looked at your bike said it had weak spark on two plugs but not sure I'd take him at his word on that. He didn't even notice that the plug wires were not in their proper places...


When I bought it the air box was dissasembled and the carbs had no filter attached. The spark is blue but looks thin. The spark plugs always come out dry and with a little soot. No fuel ever shoots out of the cylinders when I crank with the plugs removed. They are always dry. First thing I'm gonna do is remove carbs and dip overnight. I'll check the jets to see if they are still to spec. Now to figure out what the specs for the jets are..??
 
I'll check the jets to see if they are still to spec. Now to figure out what the specs for the jets are..??

Try these specs for your 550:

GS550L (77-79) the specs are for the VM's

idle r/min 1100-1200
carb mik vm22ss
id no 47110
bore size 22 (0.87)
float height 24.+/-1.0 (0.95 +/-0.04)
fuel level 4.0+/-1.0 (0.16 +/-0.04)
air screw 2.0 turns back
cut away 1.5
jet needle 5dl35-3 (the -3 3rd notch??)
pilot screw 1.0
pilot jet #15
pilot outlet 0.6
needle jet 0-6
by pass 1.0
main jet #80
 
Thanks for the specs Don.

Yes, I have the stock airbox installed with a new filter.
 
Hey John,

I picked up a 77 GS 550 this winter as a project and struggled like you with the spark. The coil resistance was marginal at best and the resistance of the wires coming from the points was bad. I bit the bullet, ripped the points, coils and plug wires out and replaced with Dyna everything. I've never see a fatter blue spark than that.

The biggest issue I've had was that I had to spend a lot of time with the carbs. You're on the right track with the intake boot o-rings. I know that o-ring guy on this forum has about every other o-ring but he doesn't have the intake boot o-rings for the 550. I got them at my local Suzuki dealer for cheap so you might try that. You'd be surprised at how many parts are still available through Suzuki for this old bike. Do yourself a favor and don't put the phillips screws back in - use the hex screws for the boots. You'll thank yourself later.

Someone posted a fuel screw air screw setting on this forum that worked for me also.

Fuel screw (these are the ones on the bottom of the bowl) - 5/8
Air screw - 1.25 to 1.5 out.

These settings worked for me too and the bike fires up every time, the first time.

Good luck with your GS550.

Cheers,
Mark
 
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