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That is correct.In (clockwise) to lean and out (counter clockwise to) richen ...right?
Have you tried the recommended THREE turns for a starting point? :-kLess than two turns out and the bike dies when the throttle is "bipped".
Where did you find needles with more than one slot? Stock needles only had one slot.Going back to school on the slide needles I left at the #2 slot.
The mixture screw only affects the idle mixture
What throttle position is giving the problem?
I haven't yet taken a shortcut that didn't end up biting me in the ass and being a pain in my back...... OH the lessons I'm learning....... :frown:
Ok. Clearly, running rich
Sounds like bad emulsion tubes to me
The new mixture screws are K&L. While I was cleaning the enrichment (choke) valves I did look to see if they were tight fitting (they seemed to be) I didn't really look to see if the Mukuni #115 jets were bored..but I rather doubt it he had dynajet #140's in their place ... visual inspection of the two side by side showed that the #140's were HUGE compared to the mukuni (factory mark) jets."The engine runs when the screws are lightly seated (and speeds up)."
these are new mixture screws? Are they mikuni? Are "chokes" closing completely when off?
make sure the original main jets that you put back in were not drilled out before the dynojet ones showed up
Me..I'd stick with stock main and stock needle..these low trips that you are taking are likely running mostly on pilot circuit...and yours is behaving badly. Check the k&l mixture screws...do they look similar to my sketch
View attachment 57979

Thanks for that method Steve. I will get to it.. I am sure that my short test rides have mostly been on the slow circuit and that I still have some problems (most likely from this discussion something going on with the needle jets and the jet needle (emulsion tube and needle).You were mentioning fouled plugs several times. What were the conditions for the tests? If you were just riding around the neighborhood, using all the circuits in the carbs, you still don't know which circuit is causing the problem. You need to do systematic testing. Start with fresh plugs and a warm engine. Let the engine idle for a couple minutes, stop the engine, look at the plugs. That tests the pilot screw settings. Next, find an area where you can HOLD the throttle at about 1/8 (make marks on tape applied to the throttle housing for a visual aid). Note that 1/8 throttle in lower gears will scoot you right along. Shift to a higher gear earlier, you can maintain a lower speed without accelerating. It is throttle position, not engine speed that determines which carb circuit is in use. After riding for about a minute, find someplace where you can keep the throttle at that same setting, pull the clutch, hit the kill switch and coast to a stop, where you can examine the plugs.
Repeat the "hold throttle, pull clutch, kill engine, coast to a stop" routine at 1/4, 1/2 and full-throttle settings. 20 to 30 seconds at each setting (other than full) should give you enough coloration.
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