S
scott
Guest
Hard starting- i.e. "choke" seems to do nothing- indicates clogged passages, probably in this circuit as well as the pilot jets. Yeah, back to thorough carb cleaning. Strip, dip and blow out all the passages. In case others are coming on late, remind folks that you did valve adjustment.
I hate to say it but this thread is really sounding to me like you need to pull the carbs and do them again. I just read this from start to finish and it sure sounds like dirty carb passages to me , bad idle , no choke , hard starting . Prime examples of dirty carbs![]()
Okay - I just wanted to make sure it made sense before I started all that again. I was hoping I could be lazy and just do Carbs #1 and #2 or not do the full dip but I know that's a bad idea. I assume a full 24 hr dip isn't necessary though. It's been a few weeks since I've had the carbs off so I've ALMOST forgotten how much of a pain it is to get them back on.
Hopefully Tom's theory is right and it was the cam timing mis-alignment that caused something to gunk up the carbs so after this cleaning I won't have to do it again for a while. Then again, it was right after the cam timing adjustment that my choke seemed to work correctly for the first time since I had the bike (causing RPMs over 2000) so who knows. As luck would have it, I have some parts on order that would require the carbs to be off (float bowl drain screws, cam chain tensioner spring, etc.) but they probably won't arrive until after I've got them re-assembled and back on the bike. They're not crucial parts at least.
I had been thinking: since my cam timing was pretty far off, maybe instead of a PO messing it up, something was wrong with the bike caused it to go out of alignment and it happened again (like a faulty cam chain tensioner allowed it to "bounced" out of alignment again). Not sure how likely that is and it doesn't sound like that coincides with my symptoms anyway.