Hey guys I need a little help with this one.
My used-to-be-reliable commuter bike, the 1983 Kawasaki GPZ 750, developed starting problems last week and I can't figure it out. It used to start with almost no problem in the morning, even when it was near freezing out. (I'm going to school in Northern California so it never gets below 30 degrees) When I couldn't start it i would take my 1978 Honda CB750K to work instead, which starts first kick, every time! I thought the Honda was the unreliable bike. Usually I don't take the Honda because I have to park in a sketchy area full of transients and bums who might tip over my shiny ride. The Kawasaki is beat to hell but runs awesome, when it starts, so I take that because it looks like a piece.
The facts: it started fine in the morning until last week or so.
Once it warms up into the 50s or so the bike starts, albeit with some hesitation.
It's an electric start, so no kicking this beast.
One morning I tried starting it with some starting fluid. She backfired, scared the hell out of me and nearly blew my eardrum out. She didn't start that morning. Started later that day after it warmed up outside.
Thinking it's an ignition issue I pulled a plug and grounded it to the head. Nice spark.
I pulled the carbs and took off the float bowls. Clean, clean, clean. I didn't check the jets but I have a feeling they're fine.
What I noticed is that when it does start it's immediately after I've released the starter button. So, thinking that the battery is weak, and maybe old (it is) I bought a new battery today and am charging it right now.
If this doesn't work I'm at a loss. It's getting fuel, the plugs are sparking. Nothing's changed with bike as far as I can tell. WHAT'S GOING ON ? I can't figure this out. Please help me if you can. I'll let you know tomorrow if the new battery starts her. Short of that, I'm going to pull the carbs again and clean the jets. Thanks guys.
-Torrin