Hi guys!
Please bear with my english, it´s a little rusty!
I have got a little problem with my CB 500K from 1977. If the bike is idling and I snap the throttle wide open the bike stalls immediately. The bike revs just fine until about 50% of full throttle at idle. On the road the bike behaves like normal until I suddenly snap the throttle open. The bike does not pick up speed immediately, and starts to hesitate. Eventually it picks up speed after a couple of seconds of coughing. If I open the throttle gradually the bike goes like a little rocket, even when it reaches wide open throttle. Seems like the mixture isn't right, to lean - right?
I guess a little more info about the will come in handy. I completely rebuilt the engine during wintertime, and had a new 4-4 exhaust (replica) hooked up. I swapped out the new air filter with a new one, and I run the original air filter box. Yesterday I removed all the plugs, one of them was a little black (cyl. 2). The other ones seemed okay. I cleaned off the black plug with a brush and screwed it back in.
I also removed the carbs, popped them open and removed the needle jets. Cleaned them out with a little needle and compressed air and made sure nothing was trapped inside the little holes. I often hear people talk about crap inside the bowls, well I wouldn't say my ones were messy at all. Some minor white and green contaminants on the needle jet bodies tho... The name of the carburetors I believe is Keihin PD46A. The little mixture screws found on the engine side of the carb body were not adjusted with the same amount of turns on the carbs, so I screwed the snug, then i opened them one and a half turn just to start. I probably should have taken the carbs further apart, because the problem is still there.
So what should I do next? The bike is definitely rideable, so it is not a major problem. But it would be lovely if like the bike responded to wide open throttle without any hesitation.