Yes Bill, I agree. Re-jetting when installing pods is a definite must.
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Well, I guess I could have piped in sooner, didn't occur to me.
I spend most of my time working on 450's, which are fairly immune to these problems, due to the nature of their carbs.
But with these "cable pulls up the slide" type carbs, jetting changes are generally indicated after mods to intake particularly (but also exhaust changes many times). And since there are several "circuits" (different jet systems) involved, several different effects can be observed - none of them may be what you expect, and they're rarely "linear".
In the absence of sophisticated equipment (oh, you've seen my shop), everything has to be worked out emperically (get on it and ride).
Fiddle with the choke a bit when it's running weird - if it runs better, you're lean in that range.
If you want a good plug "reading", go somewhere that you can immediately start the bike and take off like a bat outa' hell. Go to this place, and install fresh clean plugs. Take off like the aforementioned bat, get on it hard for 4-5 miles. Keep the rpm up, but use a lower gear if it if it causes you to go 120mph. Hit the kill switch, pull over and look at the plugs. That will tell if you're rich or lean on the top of the range.
Reading the plugs after extended normal driving is really only indicative of the lower parts of the power range, since you spend a bunch of time idling and at low rpm.
Since the slide needle is tapered, a combination of jet sizing and needle placement can generally "linearize" your response and give even performance.
bill