Hey all,
Both rapid stops and steep downhill stops almost always result in the engine stalling. Is this a normal byproduct of sloshing gas in the bowls?
'77 CB550 K3
Thanks!
No, unless the float bowl levels are extremely low, or very, very high.
When too low, the engine struggles to transition from normal-burn fuel-air ratios to lean-burn ratios as it slows down. This results in a slowdown in RPM, and the inertia of the crankshaft is not heavy enough to 'spin thru' it like in old V8 engines.
When too high, the fuel actually spouts upward in the jets when the bike decelerates hard, flooding the engine like you switched on the choke.
Either one will stall the engine. Look at your sparkplugs to see if they are dark, or white. If dark, it is too rich, if white, too lean.
Some hints:
1. If you 'rebuilt' the carbs recently and replaced the brass parts (jets, jet needle and needle jet) then it is 100% TOO LEAN. All of the aftermarket brass parts for these carbs today are too lean, and are incorrectly made. Use the OEM brass parts.
2. If the mainjets will barely stay in their holes in the carbs, you have been stung by aftermarket rebuild kit O-rings. The O-ings in the kits are too thin (usually 1x4 size) to seal the jet into the emulsifier's tube mount, and the result is a lot of extra fuel sloshing up into the mainjet emulsifier. This will build up every time you decelerate the throttle from midrange toward idle, drowning the engine. If this is the case with your carbs, PM me your address and I can send you a set of 4 O-rings that will fit.