I bought a '80 CB-650 a couple years ago for $200. I'm building a couple off-road karts, and the CB-650 engine looked like a good fit. Plus, the guy had a spare engine kicking around, so I got one engine for each kart.
I've been building the karts for ~3 yrs on and off, and finally focused on one this summer and got it completed. Now I've turned to getting the engine going. I cleaned up the CB-650 engine, took the carbs off and apart, soaked them and re-assembled them. After a cleanup, all the carb parts looked pretty good. Re-assy went fine. Once I installed and wired up the engine in the kart, I was astounded that after a few cranks it started right up! One of the float valves was stuck as it began to piss gas out the bottom nipple. I stopped the engine, took off the carbs, replaced the offending float valve and re-assembled. Once again, started up fine and idled relatively nicely. As it warmed it was very sensitve to the choke position. Once it was fully warm, I could let up on the choke a bit, but if I opened the choke up more that a little, the engine would die. I tried to take it for a spin, but it had very low power. It seemed to idle relatively cleanly, but with bit a rolling surge to it.
The Clymer manual suggets that idle screws should be turned 2 1/4 turns out on the '80 CB-650. Once the float bowls are screwed in place, you can only idle adj screws ~1/2 turn as they have a lever type head on them. I haven't experimented with much different idle screw positions because of this, but that was my next guess.
Oh, one more thing. I'm not using the airbox, but pods instead. I have a 4-to-1 exhaust header (stock, I think).
Any ideas?
Thanks.
Geoff