Have marked your throttle so you can note which fuel metering device is dominant?
The main jet controls mixture from 3/4 to WOT. The slide needle diameter and taper angle dominate mixture from 1/4 to 3/4 throttle position. (You can make a gross adjustment of this with clip position in the slides.) The pilot circuit dominates mixture from idle to 1/4 throttle position. You may have used all three circuits during your ride with a combination of too rich to too lean or just right for any of the metering devices.
Certainly, number 4 shows an aberration that needs a correction first. Quite possibly a float level issue, or even a choke plate not synced with the others, runner leak, emulsion tube blockage, even a cam or valve issue. The carbs are the last thing to tweak AFTER all the mechanicals are verified and the entire 3k tuneup schedule is performed.
Then you do a Dyno or test track procedure to find what carb circuits at given throttle positions either show on the exhaust sniffer or deposit patterns show up on the spark plugs.
You do know this hunting for correction is a direct result of your engineering change to intake and exhaust, right?
Are you willing to pay dyno fees?
Do you have a test track where you can safely wail on the motor and a supply of fresh clean plugs to read after each run at specific throttle positions?
Or do you expect to make random changes to main, needle, and pilot circuit, to stumble upon something you can live with?
Cheers,
Thanks for the detailed response, TwoTired. Agreed, I used all circuits during the test ride, making discerning which was causing the rich condition impossible. I appreciate the suggested order of diagnostics.
RE: "You do know this hunting for correction is a direct result of your engineering change to intake and exhaust, right?" - I purchased the bike with the exhaust and pods so while I didn't initiate this design change, I accept it. I have also learned much about the perils of these changes from this forum. I am changing out the pods for a filtered breadbox to get closer to the orig intake for this reason.
RE: "Are you willing to pay dyno fees?" - Absolutely, if it helps me understand how to pinpoint the issue.
RE: "Do you have a test track where you can safely wail on the motor and a supply of fresh clean plugs to read after each run at specific throttle positions?" - I do! But not likely an option for me. I will have to exhaust more diagnostic methods before taking this step.
RE: "Or do you expect to make random changes to main, needle, and pilot circuit, to stumble upon something you can live with?" - Nope. I wouldn't be on here if random changes were of any interest. I'd like to think every change I've made is a result of information I've received here or elsewhere. I've certainly come across results that I don't understand, but this only prompts more investigation and testing. With the help of posts like yours and others, I'll get there!