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Quote from: Beefington1975 on September 20, 2022, 08:19:51 PMJust a thought...saw someone on another thread suggest that engine oil level could be a factor? I've checked mine and it's on the top line. The deposits on the plugs look dry, but could the fouling be due to excess oil???I would only expect a high oil level to become an issue at high engine rpm due to excessive oil misting
Just a thought...saw someone on another thread suggest that engine oil level could be a factor? I've checked mine and it's on the top line. The deposits on the plugs look dry, but could the fouling be due to excess oil???
Quote from: Beefington1975 on September 20, 2022, 08:19:51 PMJust a thought...saw someone on another thread suggest that engine oil level could be a factor? I've checked mine and it's on the top line. The deposits on the plugs look dry, but could the fouling be due to excess oil???As Ted indicated, I stood don't feel there is any effects likely from this. They have more tolerance to raised oil level that this amount.Wouldn't discount the air filter as suspect though. Any significant impairment with this will impact that mixture and not be readily evident from just looking at the filter. Definitely worth trying with it removed to at least give you a check on condition and flow impact to running. Easy and costs nothing too.
Try with the screws set at 2 1/2 turns out and see if that gives anything in the way of sensible running, or improvement at all.It does appear to be too rich. Do you know which size of idle jet is fitted to them ?More rudimentary check is to remove air filter and see if that improves running. Really just trying to get further assessment to help indicate what may be out of kilter.
For some reason it seems to be getting just a little excess fuel at the very low end of carb range. Setting the screws out further will not change the metered fuel from idle jets at their maximum (roughly half way through carb opening) as that's controlled by the 40 sized orifice. What the air modulation does is to change the "ramp" angle leading to that point by bleeding more air through than fuel at the very base of throttle slide opening. Honda don't state an absolute for this setting of air jet, more a competent start point to be refined during setup. Obviously this case you can see the response from resetting them (indicating circuits are working reasonably) and ending up at 2.5 out is probably at the far end of range reality, but not unworkable. Probably more assessment is valid here to see if you've any unwanted complications and perhaps see if anything else is out of the ordinary over further mileage.At least if it runs well you've got a chance to now get more comprehensive view.The inline filters, I'd definitely not associate with low speed fuel demand and feel confident to discount those in this area of carburetor work. Usually it's peak flow that is of concern with these and inadequate supply volume to replenish float chambers fast enough when flat out and wide open throttle. The float chamber of course acts a constant reservoir to the jets and will ordinarily have no problems at low speed.
Quote from: K2-K6 on September 22, 2022, 06:11:33 PMFor some reason it seems to be getting just a little excess fuel at the very low end of carb range. Setting the screws out further will not change the metered fuel from idle jets at their maximum (roughly half way through carb opening) as that's controlled by the 40 sized orifice. What the air modulation does is to change the "ramp" angle leading to that point by bleeding more air through than fuel at the very base of throttle slide opening. Honda don't state an absolute for this setting of air jet, more a competent start point to be refined during setup. Obviously this case you can see the response from resetting them (indicating circuits are working reasonably) and ending up at 2.5 out is probably at the far end of range reality, but not unworkable. Probably more assessment is valid here to see if you've any unwanted complications and perhaps see if anything else is out of the ordinary over further mileage.At least if it runs well you've got a chance to now get more comprehensive view.The inline filters, I'd definitely not associate with low speed fuel demand and feel confident to discount those in this area of carburetor work. Usually it's peak flow that is of concern with these and inadequate supply volume to replenish float chambers fast enough when flat out and wide open throttle. The float chamber of course acts a constant reservoir to the jets and will ordinarily have no problems at low speed.That makes sense. I'll run it as-is for a while and keep monitoring. Will change the air filter too to rule that out as a factor. Thank you for the generous help and information - it's paying off and I've learned a lot. Cheers
The last few of posts got me tinkering with my 500 K1 as it's raining. I have been unable to get it to idle at low speed it just cuts out or runs at over 2k rpm - let off the main stop screw just a fraction and it stops. I've not done anything to the carbs as I was not too bothered about how it runs as long as I can try out all the gears on a short run.So I checked the four air screws - they were all set at around 1.5 turns. I moved them to 2 turns then fired her up and let off the throttle stop screw a tad again - she now idles quite comfortably at around 1200 rpm. Yes not perfectly even yet but so much better than it was - gives me more confidence that it will not conk out on a run now.