I've put new o-rings everywhere that matters. I'm bench testing float height on a 2x4 in back of my truck.
tang had about 1/16th of a gap, and the flaot height was 1/4" above the gasket. (too high)
bent the tang up to 3/16th of a gap, and the float height didn't change. at all. still 1/4" or so above the gasket.
my carbs floood 3 seconds after starting the bike, if it starts at all.
o-rings seem to fit fine everywhere.
jets are tight. needles are seating fine.
what gives ?
Quote from: ohgood on June 27, 2009, 10:08:51 AM
my carbs floood 3 seconds after starting the bike, if it starts at all.
As in gas spilled out into the airbox, or the bike just stopped running, or both?
Were there any symptoms when you started adjusting floats and changing the o-rings?
Quote from: ohgood on June 27, 2009, 10:08:51 AM
I've put new o-rings everywhere that matters. I'm bench testing float height on a 2x4 in back of my truck.
tang had about 1/16th of a gap, and the flaot height was 1/4" above the gasket. (too high)
bent the tang up to 3/16th of a gap, and the float height didn't change. at all. still 1/4" or so above the gasket.
my carbs floood 3 seconds after starting the bike, if it starts at all.
o-rings seem to fit fine everywhere.
jets are tight. needles are seating fine.
what gives ?
You are on the right track - OK here is the Q -
You have blow tested the floats for seal ?
Cool.
Buddha.
yeah blow test.... or you can send the carbs to buddha he's good at BLOW TESTING.....lol jk
Quote from: The Buddha on June 29, 2009, 09:38:29 AM
Quote from: ohgood on June 27, 2009, 10:08:51 AM
I've put new o-rings everywhere that matters. I'm bench testing float height on a 2x4 in back of my truck.
tang had about 1/16th of a gap, and the flaot height was 1/4" above the gasket. (too high)
bent the tang up to 3/16th of a gap, and the float height didn't change. at all. still 1/4" or so above the gasket.
my carbs floood 3 seconds after starting the bike, if it starts at all.
o-rings seem to fit fine everywhere.
jets are tight. needles are seating fine.
what gives ?
You are on the right track - OK here is the Q -
You have blow tested the floats for seal ?
Cool.
Buddha.
Nope. Please explain.
Put the fuel line back on, pull the bowls and turn the carbs on their head.
Blow into the fuel line - it should hold back the force of your lungs. If you're trying with an air compressor - make it 20-30 psi.
Send it to me and it does get blow tested. How else you thing I send carbs time and time again with the floats set perfectly. People adjust air screw, and that is about it. 90% of them dont even need to do that.
Yea send it to me, and a few lincolns it will come back running like a swiss watch.
Cool.
Buddha.