I
ivan
Guest
Hey Guys,
I recently picked up a 1981 Suzuki GS 650 that I am slowly bringing back to life. The original owner hadn't been riding the motorcycle much and as a result it wasn't able to start.
I immediately took out all the carbs and prepared to clean them only to find out that they were completely spotless and had already been cleaned. What I did notice was that one bronze washer was missing from carburetor 1, making the main jet sit about 2mm lower than the rest. I replaced the washer and reassembled the Carbs.
I then changed the oil, replaced the oil filter, cleaned the air filter and changed all spark plugs. Upon inspection plug 1 was dripping with oil, the same carb that was missing a washer. The other three seemed a bit lean. Once that was completed I reassembled the bike, set the petcock to prime and anxiously waited for the bowls to fill. I was able to find the sweet spot at about half choke to start the motorcycle. It would not enter an idle with the choke off but I was able to keep it running at half choke.
I put the bike away and this morning I attempted to start the bike again but it would not. I ended up draining the battery. To my surprise I noticed that in my haste I had left the petcock on prime overnight. Thinking that I had flooded the engine I took the plugs out noticed that they were ash white. I checked the oil and it did not smell of gas, I even hand cranked the pistons without sparkplugs to see if I could get any gas out of the "flooded engine" but there was none. The gas tank was still half full and seems that it hadn't drained at all. I checked the petcock and noticed that it does drain fine, however the angle that the fuel line was put, along with the inline fuel filter, must have created a jam and not allowed fuel to flow freely. I have purchased new fuel line and will see if changing it fixes the problem.
Here is a video of the bike running last time. To me it sounds like it is running very lean, which would explain the fuel starvation. Let me know what you guys think.
[video]https://vid.me/mylX[/video]
I recently picked up a 1981 Suzuki GS 650 that I am slowly bringing back to life. The original owner hadn't been riding the motorcycle much and as a result it wasn't able to start.
I immediately took out all the carbs and prepared to clean them only to find out that they were completely spotless and had already been cleaned. What I did notice was that one bronze washer was missing from carburetor 1, making the main jet sit about 2mm lower than the rest. I replaced the washer and reassembled the Carbs.
I then changed the oil, replaced the oil filter, cleaned the air filter and changed all spark plugs. Upon inspection plug 1 was dripping with oil, the same carb that was missing a washer. The other three seemed a bit lean. Once that was completed I reassembled the bike, set the petcock to prime and anxiously waited for the bowls to fill. I was able to find the sweet spot at about half choke to start the motorcycle. It would not enter an idle with the choke off but I was able to keep it running at half choke.
I put the bike away and this morning I attempted to start the bike again but it would not. I ended up draining the battery. To my surprise I noticed that in my haste I had left the petcock on prime overnight. Thinking that I had flooded the engine I took the plugs out noticed that they were ash white. I checked the oil and it did not smell of gas, I even hand cranked the pistons without sparkplugs to see if I could get any gas out of the "flooded engine" but there was none. The gas tank was still half full and seems that it hadn't drained at all. I checked the petcock and noticed that it does drain fine, however the angle that the fuel line was put, along with the inline fuel filter, must have created a jam and not allowed fuel to flow freely. I have purchased new fuel line and will see if changing it fixes the problem.
Here is a video of the bike running last time. To me it sounds like it is running very lean, which would explain the fuel starvation. Let me know what you guys think.
[video]https://vid.me/mylX[/video]