calj737, thanks for your help.
- New points and Condensers. Do you happen to know the brand of these?
New points and caps were bought from 4into1, no branding, they are "aftermarket built to meet or exceed OEM specifications"
- Swapped coils from 1/4 to 2/3, problem remained on 1/4. (When you did this, did you also change the ignition wires to the coils from the plate? Else, your coils would be firing in reverse...)
Yes, I did swap cables too. I should have elaborated a bit more into this. I physically swapped ignition coils, left to right and right to left, I had to change the high voltage cables too.
I'd suggest:
- An idle plug chop, with fresh clean plugs, as a baseline.
ok I already have a box of NGK D7EA, I will try to do this today and send an update.
- Measure the resistance of the plug caps on all four cylinders. They should be 4.7-5.0K Ohms.
I did that, all four caps where around 5K (NKG, can't remember the model number), I also measured resistance between plug caps with the coil connected to them. It was around 24K. The testing I did is detailed in the following URL:
http://blacksquaremotorcycle.com/ignition-coils-test/- Are these stock coils? Can you provide some detail on the means by which you swapped coils?
- Can you provide the model number for your carbs please
- And to the best of your knowledge, the needle clip position and brand of jets inside your carbs.
I got the coils from a salvage Honda Nighthawk 1983, perfectly running before a crash (the guy told me that, I assumed it was true since the bike crashed while running xD).
Carbs are Kei-Hin 627B, stamped as 3313 in the rack.
Regarding the needle position, I did insert the clip in the 1st notch from top to bottom. I got the best performance at high RPM in this position (when the bike ran great). All the carburetor repair kit was bought from 4into1 (aftermarket ), except for the slow jets, which are OEM, brand new, honda packaged (I bought them last year).
This is to sort out the fouling issue as mentioned. The racing idle is more likely associated with a vacuum leak, or a timing advancer issue, which, could also be a source of problems for your plugs fouling.
When I changed the points and condensers, I set them up using a multi meter (MM) in continuity mode:
1st: adjust point gap (0.35mm)
2nd: with the coils disconnected, connect one cable of the MM to ground and the other to the terminal of the point under configuration.
3rd: rotate the shaft till the MM beep stops and check the shaft position.
4th: move the point slightly until the beep stops at the F mark.
5: repeat for the other point.
After doing this and running the bike a couple of times, I do not have back fires nor the timing has moved (I double checked this).
Again thanks a bunch for chiming in, I will try to do the idle chop today and let you know the outcome. If you think anything else, please let me know, I would highly appreciate it.
THANK YOU!!