After a bench sync I'm having what I consider to be some damn stubborn carbs.
Pertinent details: 1977 cb550k, stock airbox, foam filter, idle screws 1.5 out, 100 mains, 45 idles, 4 into one mac exhaust.
So I thought the carbs would be pretty close to balanced after a decent bench sync. I connected my manometer to dial in the carbs with a good vacuum sync and I'm still having the same issue right off the bat. Long story short, #2 pulls such a strong vacuum and #4 pulls virtually nothing. No amount of adjustment either way affects the vacuum from a visible, liquid-in-bottle point of view.
Since #2 is the baseline carb to balance the others off of, I cannot do anything to tweak it. After a bit of tweaking #1 and #3, I was able to get them stable (no major up or down on the level in the bottle), however either #2 has such a strong vacuum or #4 has a negative vacuum that after 30 seconds of idling the bottle on #4 empties. Extreme adjustments to #4 either bottoms out and raises the needles on the other 3 carbs, which sends RPMs up very quickly, or, in the other direction, it stalls out.
I took this video before I had evened out #1 and #3 (1-1.5 turns counterclockwise), but the same thing seems to happen with #2, but much more violently since it's the only one that seems to have excessive pull. I know I will need to change them back (i.e. equal vacuum as #2), but I really wanted to demonstrate that adjustments DO have an impact on the other carbs, just not #4.
And the ultimate question is - WHY NOT?
For what it's worth, I did notice that bottoming out the slide in #4 did cool the cylinder - the pipe on #4 cooled off when I had bottomed it out. Upon lifting it the pipe heated back up, as if to indicate the adjustment was having an impact on the amount of fuel getting to the chamber - just not the vacuum.
Any thoughts here? I am completely stumped.