I am not too familiar with these carbs, so let me share what I know. The accelerator pump I am refering to is a diaphram under a circular cover on the left side of each carb. It is a diaphram on a peg that is not connected to any outside mechanism and moves with vacuum from inside the carbs. Maybe it's not an accelerator pump. If not, I don't know what it is. I just pulled off the carbs for cleaning this weekend. I did not soak them, but sprayed generous amounts of B-12 through all orifaces and then blew them out with compressed air. I got a good stream of cleaner through everything and do not think there is any blockage.
The jetting on these carbs is weird. Each has a main jet, a secondary main jet and a pilot jet. Stock is 75 main, 110 secondary main and I forget what the pilot is right now. The mains and pilots are stock. I replaced the secondary mains with 120s because I was told that would help the bike run a little cooler by running a little richer. I soaked and cleaned all of the jets and the emulsion tubes in B-12. All appeared clear and the little holes on the sides of the emulsion tubes also are clear. Needles and emulsion tubes are stock.
Exhaust is stock two-into-two. Air cleaner is foam, also stock. The only variable is I recently rebuilt the top end after the previous top end seized. I replaced the cylinder with a good cylinder off one of two parts 400s I own (a '78 and a '79) and replaced the rings. It ran well with no apparent restrictions on the top speed before the rebuild, and compression numbers afterward were adequate (125 psi cold on each side). Used the same head. Readjusted the valves, which I am not spectacularly proficient at. Maybe the valves need to be regapped. Could that be the problem?
Bike has a CDI and no mechanism for timing adjustment, just cam timing.
I'm thinking the problem is the carbs, but I'm not sure what would be wrong with them. I completely rebuilt this bike four years ago and it ran very well until my son ran it low on oil and the top end seized (seized while idling, not at speed). I obviously am overlooking something, but I don't know what. I am convinced the problem is with the air/fuel mixture, but everything seems to be set up correctly.
Also, my K5 750, which I also rebuilt from the ground up, has been running great for three years.
Patrick