I live in Queensland, Australia, and ride a 1995 non-ABS British spec ST 1100 outfit. The bike has developed a puzzling fault, and I will be very grateful for any advice other ST owners may care to offer. The sequence of events is as follows:
1) A few months ago, the bike began losing power after hard acceleration. I would pass a car or zoom up a steep hill, and then the bike would suddenly lose power. This became progressively worse up to the point where the bike would not start or run.
2) I suspected a faulty fuel pump. Pulled this out and found it worked perfectly. Plenty of fuel is reaching the point where the fuel line divides to feed the LH and RH sides of the engine. Removed the air cleaner and started the engine to find that cylinders 1 and 3 weren't firing (this is the LH bank of the V4). There was no air being sucked into the velocity stacks. Effectively, the engine was running on the RH bank only.
3) Removed both coils and tested. Resistance was high on the secondary windings of both coils. This seemed a logical culprit, as one coil serves the LH cylinders and the other serves the RHS
4) Installed new coils, HT leads, and plugs this morning. I now have a big, fat, blue spark on all four cylinders... but still have the same problem. Cylinders 1 and 3 are not functioning.
5) The bike will idle on cylinders 2 and 4 without the air cleaner. However, once the air cleaner is on, the bike refuses to start.
Likely, the LH cylinders are not getting any fuel. This could mean a blockage in the fuel line serving the LH cylinders. However, before gritting my teeth and removing the carbies to reach those well-buried fuel lines thought I would see if there are any other theories out there in STland!
BTW, in my view, the ST1100 is an ideal sidecar tug. My chair is a double, and the Honda propels it along at highway speeds with ease.
1) A few months ago, the bike began losing power after hard acceleration. I would pass a car or zoom up a steep hill, and then the bike would suddenly lose power. This became progressively worse up to the point where the bike would not start or run.
2) I suspected a faulty fuel pump. Pulled this out and found it worked perfectly. Plenty of fuel is reaching the point where the fuel line divides to feed the LH and RH sides of the engine. Removed the air cleaner and started the engine to find that cylinders 1 and 3 weren't firing (this is the LH bank of the V4). There was no air being sucked into the velocity stacks. Effectively, the engine was running on the RH bank only.
3) Removed both coils and tested. Resistance was high on the secondary windings of both coils. This seemed a logical culprit, as one coil serves the LH cylinders and the other serves the RHS
4) Installed new coils, HT leads, and plugs this morning. I now have a big, fat, blue spark on all four cylinders... but still have the same problem. Cylinders 1 and 3 are not functioning.
5) The bike will idle on cylinders 2 and 4 without the air cleaner. However, once the air cleaner is on, the bike refuses to start.
Likely, the LH cylinders are not getting any fuel. This could mean a blockage in the fuel line serving the LH cylinders. However, before gritting my teeth and removing the carbies to reach those well-buried fuel lines thought I would see if there are any other theories out there in STland!
BTW, in my view, the ST1100 is an ideal sidecar tug. My chair is a double, and the Honda propels it along at highway speeds with ease.