I checked the carb boots and they were numbered 1324.
Carb boots? You mean "spark plug" boots?
Actually the firing order for 1975 CB750F Super Sport is 1324. This is based on an original bike. Mine was set like that, plus I checked the carb (spark plug?) boots and they were numbered 1324.
thanks for all help
If you are indeed talking about the "spark plug" boots, then all you have proven is the #2 and #3 spark plug boots are swapped... which would have no bearing on how the bike runs since 2 and 3 fire at the exact same time.
If you are talking about the "carb" boots, then somebody inadvertently swapped the carb boots as well...
Now I'm really confused. Pictures are coming tomorrow.
Well, spark plugs boots are also numbered, but plugs boots #1 and #4 are angled about 120 degrees and they couldn't fit in the middle cylinders.
But also carb boots are numbered #1 #3 #2 #4.
I would say nobody else worked on this bike before me. Last your when I got this bike, and started cleaning the carb it was yellow paint on every nut and bolt on the carb and on the bike. And that paint was the warrantee.
You are mixing up two different concepts here. The cylinders are numbered from left to right:
1,2,3,4
This is for reference only, so that when someone describes "firing order" or "top dead center" or "timing" you can relate the term to the physical location of the cylinder in question. The numbers on the spark plug boots, or sometimes even the spark plug wires, should correspond to the physical location of the cylinder being served. The points plate and spark advancer (that carries the "points cam") determine the correct distribution and timing of the spark (i.e. "firing order"). By putting the number 4 wire on the spark plug of the number 3 cylinder (and the number 3 wire on the number 4 cylinder) would not change the "firing order" because the ignition (points assembly) would still be "firing" the number 4 plug wire in the correct "order", you would have merely connected it to the wrong cylinder. I can verify that this orientation of the plug wires does not work very well. Forget about trying to place the wires in their "firing order" sequence from left to right, that's not what the identifying numbers on the spark plug boots are for. The numbers on the spark plug boots are for identification purposes only and are supposed to be connected to their corresponding cylinder, i.e. 1,2,3,4 from left to right (while sitting on the bike). The ignition system, i.e. points plate, determines "firing order" and distributes the spark accordingly....
As long as you have the spark plug wires connected to their corresponding cylinders....
1,2,3,4 from left to right.
Trust me.
Look at it this way, if you were to connect the wires from left to right, as you obviously think they should be oriented when you are looking at the "firing order" as being described as "1243", you would be connecting the number 4 spark plug wire to the number 3 cylinder and the number 3 wire to the number 4 cylinder. Now this orientation of spark plug wires would confuse the ignition because when it "fires" the number 4 spark plug wire it would be sending a spark to the number 3 cylinder! This usually results in pretty flame out the tailpipe or back through the carb throat. The "order" of the wires doesn't change the sequence in which they "fire". The ignition always "fires" the plug wires in the same "order" no matter where you put them. Whether you decide to connect them to the correct cylinders or not is entirely up to you.