Howdy all,
Bike in question is a '73 750K with 8400 original miles, and VERY clean carbs.
Here's my question? How much spring pressure is the little teat inside the float needle supposed to apply? I know there is no spec for this, and it is a judgment call, but I noticed that a friends' bike (similar year 750 as well, with oem plastic floats) had enough strength that with the carbs upside-down, that the floats were not depressing the teat more than 5-10%. In other words, the needle spring was supporting nearly all of the weight of the float. He also had aftermarket needles and seats from a Keyster kit.
The reason I bring this up is because my carbs have been leaking (ok... they pour) out the over-flow tubes intermittently. Sometimes a good tap on the bowl helps, but more often there is no change. After removing the bowls to verify that the overflow tubes are not cracked, I noticed that my #4 needle was stuck closed... Additionally, #3 would not shut off fuel completly. Off came the carbs for a careful check of the float levels. all of the floats needed minor tweaking, but the worst were still within 1/16" of where they are supposed to be. After completing the adjustment, I noticed that when the carbs are upside-down, the weight of the floats was completly depressing the needle spring. I suspect that the needles are leaking due to insufficient seating pressure; resulting from these wimpy springs... At least that s my current theory. Can anyone share their thoughts on this? I really do not want to replace something unnecessarily. Especially since the needles are OEM parts with so few miles, and the needle tips look perfect.
Fabricator