A
Anonymous
Guest
My bike (82 GK) is running well, though it sometimes is slow to come down to idle. To be more specific, when I come to a stop sign, it will run at about 2.1k RPM (sometimes). I can let the clutch bite a bit with the brakes on to slow the engine down, and it will stay at proper idle then. I have it set at about 1.1k RPM. Looking back on earlier posts it sounds like this is a symptom of leanness.
It started this after I replaced the o-rings on the intake boots and had to re-sync. I am wondering if some of the issue here might have to do with how I synced the carbs. They say that the level of vacuum when you're syncing isn't important, just that the cylinders have certain relative levels. Is this entirely true? Or if I synced by bringing the vacuum level up on the carbs that were low (rather than down on the ones that were high) could I have leaned the mixture? Or could the way the carbs are synced adversely affected the way the bike idles?
This is the first time in a while I've really had the bike sealed right since I put new slip-on JC Whitney mufflers on it. I may just need to enrich the mixture a bit. Any thoughts?
It started this after I replaced the o-rings on the intake boots and had to re-sync. I am wondering if some of the issue here might have to do with how I synced the carbs. They say that the level of vacuum when you're syncing isn't important, just that the cylinders have certain relative levels. Is this entirely true? Or if I synced by bringing the vacuum level up on the carbs that were low (rather than down on the ones that were high) could I have leaned the mixture? Or could the way the carbs are synced adversely affected the way the bike idles?
This is the first time in a while I've really had the bike sealed right since I put new slip-on JC Whitney mufflers on it. I may just need to enrich the mixture a bit. Any thoughts?