Hi Doug,Here is the story on my carbs. When I got the bike it was running so to me in my noob ways thought....heck the carbs are basically ok.
Did you examine the spark plugs to see if they were burning fuel evenly in all cylinders?What I ended up doing was taking the bowls off and then pulling the main jet and the shutoff valve and soaking those seperately in yamaha cleaner. Then I removed the top covers from the carbs and put the entire rack in a mixture of yamaha cleaner and water for about two days. The instructions for the inards of the top of the carbs looked scary to me
So, I was hoping they were ok with a soaking.
Ahh, have you checked that the bike's hope sensor is operating within normal parameters?
Need I point out here that hope is not usually part of a good mechanics credo? Hope is a feeling/emotion in which machines seldom partake. They want what they need and won't compromise for anything less. Trust me, there's just no bargaining with them. I then put new o-rings on the main, the shutoff valves, and the float bowls and then thoroughly rinsed everything and dried them by sitting it all in front of a fan
How did you thoroughly rinse the small passageways that are drilled into the carb bodies? Did you use compressed air to verify all those were clean and clear? It doesn't sound like you pushed out the emulsion tubes that sit behind the main jet either. Could dirty cleaner solution have gotten to the small passageways and the emulsion tube cavity and not been flushed clean? Could this contamination have been allowed to dry while still in the passageways? Did you remove the slow jets for the cleaning? Did you remove the pilot screws for the cleaning procedure. Are you considering another carb teardown to verify these things are indeed clean?....now with my recent problems with the shutoff valves not shutting off I have replaced all of those. I did get 4 complete kits from Z1. So I believe those other items you mentioned are in there. I guess I should go ahead and replace everything? Even the main jets?
I don't see why. I don't know who manufactured your kits or if they were intended for carbs matching your set up number. The internal parts can be different among carbs with different set up numbers. But, I'd be particularly possessive about your Honda slide needles, for now. You should be able to examine your main and idle jets for damage and cleanliness. If you do decide to change them, do all four en masse to keep the carbs operating in a similar manner.Found the 022A stamped on the carbs.
great that tells us what they were like from Honda. Any info about possible changes from when Honda first sold them? What is your confidence that the slide needles are where Honda adjusted them still. Is there a way to determine if the runner has an air leak?
Yes, with the engine idling normally, spray WD-40 or brake cleaner on the joints where the rubber meets metal. The fluid will make a temporary seal on leaking joints and the idle will change noticeably.On the air filters......I don't know if they would be considered over oiled or not. I think what I should do is finish the carb rebuild then see what that does for the plug color. If still sooty then remove air filter and bathe them in gas to get the oil off then try a real light coating and check the plugs again. All this assuming the compression check is good.
It is a good plan. Something else to try is to run temporarily run without the air filters. 1) for mixture and plug color effect. And 2), to see if the plug running colors even out.Compression test....seems nobody in town carries the size I need (12mm)....will have to get on the internet and find one. Oh, I see z1 has one for $123! Anybody know where one may be found a little cheaper?
Do you already have the compression gauge? If not then maybe:
http://www.jcwhitney.com/autoparts/Product/Pr-p_Product.CATENTRY_ID:2011212/c-10111/Nty-1/p-2011212/Ntx-mode+matchallpartial/N-10111/tf-Browse/s-10101/Ntk-AllTextSearchGroup?Ntt=compression+tester
I admit I haven't looked for the best deal. Hey, it's your money!
Cheers,