Okay, first decent ride on the High Tea Racer today since the project began.
I picked up the bike from Collingwood, freshly fitted with new regulator, rectifier and float valve needle in carb number two.
I rode it down to Oakleigh for a meeting and then home to Thornbury after, so I got plenty of Monash Freeway, Warrigal Road and even some Eastern Freeway action. That was about two hours riding in traffic all up at various speeds.
What I learnt...
On the freeway, 100km per hour is achieved at 5,000rpm in top gear. That seems a little high and I put it down to the bigger rear sprocket that came on the bike when I bought it, so I may change it at a later date if I plan to do long runs at high speeds.
Travelling at 100kph seems okay, a bit rough in the suspension area, but then last time I was doing that speed on a bike was on my 2001 VFR800 which was built to do that. So I reckon it is just me on an older bike and I need to get used to it.
I have an exhaust leak, there was smoke coming up between the engine and gearbox, adjacent to the exhaust 4 into 1 trap, right where the cracks were in the trap that I puttied up with exhaust putty before I wrapped it. So my bad, not a good fix and something that will need a right proper fix soon, as I reckon there is a performance loss resulting from the leak.
All four cylinders are now running fine, no leaky carbs and no backfiring. But the revs at idle are a little high (over 2,000 rpm) and I will need to adjust that back a bit.
Finally - I had a 'moment' in town on the way home when I lost all revs, no amount of throttle would keep me going and I 'putt putt putted' to a stop, and then the bike would not start.
This was after a good 2 hours riding so I started to fear the worst, I was thinking...
'buggerbuggerbuggersomethinghasshatitselfintheenginenowIhavetogetatrailerorabandonthebikehereandgoforhelpwhatamIgoingtodonow'...
...
...
... then I popped the fuel filler cap and looked inside to see a dry tank. So I rolled 30m back to the BP petrol station I had just passed, 'fixed the problem' and rode home.
So there endeth the lesson.