mbovino
Mike
I'm in the process of restoring a 1991 that had gas left in it for a few years by the previous owner. I have completely gone through the carbs removed and flushed the tank, changed the fluids, filters, plugs, etc.
The bike starts and runs with a decent idle although when on the road the midrange is somewhat flat when rolling on the throttle until the main jets kick in. Opening the pilot jet screws 1 turn has helped as does partial choke. But it seems to be lacking power. The new plugs look like it is buring a bit on the lean side.
I put a vacuum gauge on each of the manifold ports in anticipation of synchronizing the carbs. But the needle fluctuates wildly at idle and at best only pulls 10 inches (I don't know what is right for the bike but that is low by auto standards).
The vacuum gauge fluctuations usually mean late ignition timing, late valve closing and/or a vacuum leak. The timing and valves are spot on. The carb boots are new and the clamps are tightened to bottoming. The carbs are seated correctly.
Even though the vacuum gauge appears to connect to independent intake manifold points, do they all interconnect somewhere because I find it hard to believe that they are all suffering from vacuum leaks? Perhaps there is a common line that is cracked or disconnected somewhere.
Is there a common fail point or some other test to look for intake leaks? The carb diaphrams are in good shape. I might try the unlit propane test near the boots, but of course things are a bit tight in there.
Any ideas or suggesions are appreciated.
Thanks,
Mike
The bike starts and runs with a decent idle although when on the road the midrange is somewhat flat when rolling on the throttle until the main jets kick in. Opening the pilot jet screws 1 turn has helped as does partial choke. But it seems to be lacking power. The new plugs look like it is buring a bit on the lean side.
I put a vacuum gauge on each of the manifold ports in anticipation of synchronizing the carbs. But the needle fluctuates wildly at idle and at best only pulls 10 inches (I don't know what is right for the bike but that is low by auto standards).
The vacuum gauge fluctuations usually mean late ignition timing, late valve closing and/or a vacuum leak. The timing and valves are spot on. The carb boots are new and the clamps are tightened to bottoming. The carbs are seated correctly.
Even though the vacuum gauge appears to connect to independent intake manifold points, do they all interconnect somewhere because I find it hard to believe that they are all suffering from vacuum leaks? Perhaps there is a common line that is cracked or disconnected somewhere.
Is there a common fail point or some other test to look for intake leaks? The carb diaphrams are in good shape. I might try the unlit propane test near the boots, but of course things are a bit tight in there.
Any ideas or suggesions are appreciated.
Thanks,
Mike