R
raistian77
Guest
whiterabbit, not knowing the history of your carbs/motor there can be things wrong that you'd never imagine (damage by a previous owner or parts mixed up/wrong parts installed). So if you get odd vacuum readings or an air screw adjustment appears to have no effect then it could be so many things.
If your pilot fuel screws (underneath) appear in good condition...
First, be sure BOTH tiny pilot circuit holes in the bottom of the carb throat are clear. There's one hole right above the pilot jet itself and then the other hole for the pilot fuel screw to regulate. Be sure both are clear by spraying cleaner or air through them. Look/feel for uniform flow so you know they are 100% clear.
Install them any order you want. Don't worry about how much of the tip sticks out in each carb bore. Simply seat each screw lightly/uniformly and back it out to 3/4 turn. 3/4 is a ballpark figure. If the bike is stock then this is a good starting point. They are set at the factory using emissions equipment and there's no way to set them accurately until you test.
Set the side air screws to 1 1/2 turns initially. On a typical bike this will be good for starting purposes. Once fully warmed up, you can adjust them by using the highest rpm method. They should respond as designed to. Most bikes with VM carbs in good condition will have their air screws between 1 1/4 and 1 3/4 turns out when tuning is finished.
Be sure you have #15 pilot jets.
Also, you should replace the manifold o-rings now. I know you said they look good and maybe they are but you must be sure. They commonly are over torqued and flattened too much and their service life shortened. Replace them and give them a coat of high temp bearing grease to help them last. Replace the stupid Phillips screws (if you still use them) with Allens and torque to about 8 or 9 ft/lb is enough. Inspect the manifolds too. If you have any vacuum leaks you'll never tune it correctly.
Just to mention, before vacuum synching you should be sure the valve clearances and ignition timing are correct.
As for the vacuum synch, I think you mentioned earlier that it was done recently? But you don't know if it was done correctly so it should be done. If for some reason you disturb the jet needles/throttle shaft then you must re-synch each time.
Since the pilot circuit controls mixture at minimal throttle openings and has effect up to 1/4 throttle, the best road testing is to ride around on level or gradual uphill roads at about 1/5 or less throttle. You want the least overlap effect from the cut-away or jet needle. It's all about throttle position and not actually speed/rpm's but just cruising around in 4th/5th gear at lower speeds (40 and under) will be fine for testing. After full warm up, I'd go somewhere that you can hold a steady speed for several minutes and then chop off and check the plugs. The pilot fuel screws are sensitive to adjustment and just a 1/8 turn can matter. Do what the plugs/performance say to. Don't worry too much if the final tuning results in the screws not being perfectly uniform in their adjustment. They are for fine tuning EACH CYLINDER and because of small differences in each cylinder this is normal. Besides plug color, look for a good/steady idle with reasonable warm up time and no obvious signs such as a puff of dark exhaust when you lightly blip the throttle off of idling several seconds.
Got a question Keith. In my Mikuni carb manual they state not to do a vacumn sync. It states that with the tops off, it creates a vacumn leak that throws off the sync. I do vac syncs because I think it is much more accurate than mechanical. Have you came accross this?