Author Topic: Help needed diagnosing a backfiring issue  (Read 606 times)

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Offline nick5446

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Help needed diagnosing a backfiring issue
« on: October 24, 2010, 04:37:41 PM »
I'm in need of some help getting my bike running. I just bought it as a project, so I don't know a ton about it. It wasn't running when I bought it and I was told it needed "carb work". When I got it home I found that the inline fuel filter was clogged, so I replaced it and it fired up. Didn't run so hot, so I adjusted the valves and the pilot screw to 1.5 turns out on each carb (they were all around 4 turns out). I also confirmed that the accelerator pump works.

When I get it running (not super-easy to start) it runs ok, but it backfires and some fuel squirts out of one of the jets (towards the airbox). Also, it revs quite high when I push the choke knob in.

Any ideas what's going?

Offline nick5446

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Re: Help needed diagnosing a backfiring issue
« Reply #1 on: October 24, 2010, 04:58:26 PM »
I should add that it's backfiring out of the carb intake, not the exhaust.

Offline Really?

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Re: Help needed diagnosing a backfiring issue
« Reply #2 on: October 24, 2010, 05:10:46 PM »
I am no carb expert but it sounds like the carbs are dirty, running lean and out of sync.  If the filter was that dirty, what got into the carbs?
I don't have a motorcycle, sold it ('85 Yamaha Venture Royale).  Haven't had a CB750 for over 40 years.

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Offline TIM TINGEY, age 55

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Re: Help needed diagnosing a backfiring issue
« Reply #3 on: October 24, 2010, 05:58:13 PM »
Not sure which bike you have, but you might have air leaks at the intake spigots. Though you did a valve adjustment the clearances on SOHC Honda's was .002 and .003 thousands- if any questions arise then set them at .003 and .004. loose is always better it gives the valves more time on the seat. Spitting back through the carb often is a intake valve that won't seal. Also check your ignition timing and point condition. Timing thats too far advanced will ignite the fuel too early-before the intake valve can close.  Lastly, if the idle mixture circuits aren't flowing fuel adequately you wont be able to adjust idle mixture correctly.  One other out-of adjustment area that causes spitting back through the carb is a cam chain that loose-resulting in cam timing thats not controlled. Email me at timmannyatingey@yahoo.com with the model and year. Good luck

Offline nick5446

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Re: Help needed diagnosing a backfiring issue
« Reply #4 on: October 24, 2010, 07:46:34 PM »
Not sure which bike you have, but you might have air leaks at the intake spigots. Though you did a valve adjustment the clearances on SOHC Honda's was .002 and .003 thousands- if any questions arise then set them at .003 and .004. loose is always better it gives the valves more time on the seat. Spitting back through the carb often is a intake valve that won't seal. Also check your ignition timing and point condition. Timing thats too far advanced will ignite the fuel too early-before the intake valve can close.  Lastly, if the idle mixture circuits aren't flowing fuel adequately you wont be able to adjust idle mixture correctly.  One other out-of adjustment area that causes spitting back through the carb is a cam chain that loose-resulting in cam timing thats not controlled. Email me at timmannyatingey@yahoo.com with the model and year. Good luck

Thanks for the info. Sorry I left out the model info; it's a '79 CB650.

I set the valves at .002 and .004 with the same mindset you mentioned.