Greetings all,
First post for me. I tend to be wordy, so my apologies in advance.
I picked up a basket case 1975 CB550K a couple weeks ago which was going to be parted out if it wasn't sold. I couldn't bear to let that happen, especially with the stock exhaust headers still on the bike, so I shelled out a very low sum and trailered it home.
An initial walk-around showed the bike to be pretty haggard, but it still started and idled very smoothly and pulled hard even into the high RPM ranges without issue. During a longer ride at highway speeds, however, the engine runs great for a short time, then stumbles, surges for a few seconds, then quits. Starting it up again right away is possible, but the smooth idle is gone as is any semblance of power, and it will not idle on its own - the throttle must remained slightly tweaked for it to continue running. I was able to limp it home. After sitting for a short while, the bike starts and runs smoothly again.
The carbs had been recently cleaned according to the owner, but I did note the swamp growing inside the fuel tank. I have an order for the full refurb kit from POR-15 arriving tomorrow, which was ironically ordered for a different CB I'm currently working on. I believe I can make it stretch to cover both tanks.
I'm looking for opinions, or at least a confirmation on my read. I believe the bike is experiencing fuel starvation issues due to the AMAZING amount of rust inside the tank. I'm uncertain why anyone would go through the carbs at all and leave the tank in the condition it's in, but to me a lack of fuel makes sense.
I've checked out the points, they're in surprisingly good condition, though the did require small adjustments. The bike is timed, the valves have been adjusted to specs. The battery is new and the bike is putting out enough voltage to maintain the charge... possibly slightly too much of a charge as the bike is having some fuse issues which are a ways down on my list of things to address.
The only other thing I can think of are condensors, but I will begin with cleaning out the entire fuel system starting with the tank, and then working my way through the lines and into the carbs themselves. Can anyone think of other possible causes?
This would be defined as a complete "snotter" by Carpy, but it still has a charm all its own, and there is some satisfaction in showing up at work on a bike with rusty ape-hanger bars and what appears to be a dull grey house paint covering all the normally painted surfaces.
I should mention I'm in the process of restoring a 1976 CB750F1 and just picked up non-running (now semi-running) 1975 CB550K which has an amazing patina on its "flake sunrise orange" paint. I'm learning as I go, and figured 3 bikes would make me learn that much faster.
(I also have a 2002 harley I'm using as a daily driver, but it's far too boring and reliable nowadays)
Thanks for your thoughts and opinions,
CBNewb