So today I was trying to sync my carbs on the 74 550 K0, and two were waaaay off, so I followed some directions I found online that said I could turn all four adjusters clockwise until closed, back off 1 turn, and start the bike and go from there.
Jeez, you got screwed taking that advise. Reminds me of the video clip where the father is showing the tyke how the video tape machine "eats" video tapes. Later the tyke feeds the video machine much better tasting mashed potatoes right into the tape slot.
So, now I've really got them screwed up. Is there a way to set them to a baseline?
I really really don't want to have to remove the carbs from the bike to bench sync them.
Is there a way to "reset" them on the bike? According to the website here they are Keihin Type 1 carbs for the 74.
No, you don't have to take them off the bike to get them functioning again. But, you will have to develop a feel for when the slide bottoms in the bore. Right now you have skewed all the adjustments so that the slides cannot close, and that is why the engine races.
Back off the big idle adjust knob to be certain that it can't block the throttle open even a little.
Pick a carb to start from, say # 1. Remove the top of the carb so you can see the arm and top of slide inside the carb body.
Now move the slide position adjuster and watch the slide move down the bore and stop adjusting when its downward travel ceases. This should be the point at which the slide has completely closed off all air flow to the cylinder. Lock that adjuster down and don't move it ever again. Slap your own hand if you reach for it. .... HARD.
You have two options for getting the others synched.
1. Move the other slides down in the bore the same way you did the first carb, until they *just* seat at the bottom of the carb throat.
This is a very coarse adjust. You will still need to vacuum sync the remaining three carbs to the reference carb (#1 remember?).
2. If the engine will get somewhere close to idle (using the big idle knob), you can adjust the vacuum of 2,3, & 4 carbs to whatever the vacuum reading is of #1, at which point you have the carbs vacuum synched.
Think about what the idle knob does. It keeps all the slides from closing off all the air to the engine.
If you actuate the idle stop knob, you should be able to make the slides move up in the ways of the carb just enough to get an idle. However, if all the adjusters are skewed so that the slides can bottom, the idle knob no longer dominates the idle stop position of the slides. (and is why the engine now idles at 5000 RPM.)
Cheers,,