gibvel Posted September 18, 2009 Posted September 18, 2009 (edited) Okay, I downloaded the service data spec. sheet for my 99... see attached. About halfway down page 1 it gives the CO% at which the carbs are supposed to be set. It appears that carbs 1 and 3 are to be set between apporximately 2.5~3.5% and 2 and 4 are supposed to be set between 3.5~4.5%. What gives and why would that have you set them differently. Let me see if I have the cylinder placement correct also. Sitting on the bike facing forward 1=LR, 2=LF, 3=RR, 4=RF I'm sure of 1 and 2 just can't remember 3 and 4. Edited September 29, 2009 by gibvel
RandyR Posted September 18, 2009 Posted September 18, 2009 I have a Guess. My guess is that the air intakes aren't perfectly balanced so the carbs have to be tweeked differently to balance things overall.
BigBoyinMS Posted September 18, 2009 Posted September 18, 2009 My guess... Fuel and air have weight and on acceleration the fuel/air mixture will tend to want to go toward the rear cylinders making them slightly richer. The CO adjustment may be meant to lean the rear cylinders a bit to offset the extra f/a mixture that gets pushed in. In city riding this would make sense but on the highway you have way less acceleration forces.
gibvel Posted September 18, 2009 Author Posted September 18, 2009 My guess... Fuel and air have weight and on acceleration the fuel/air mixture will tend to want to go toward the rear cylinders making them slightly richer. The CO adjustment may be meant to lean the rear cylinders a bit to offset the extra f/a mixture that gets pushed in. In city riding this would make sense but on the highway you have way less acceleration forces. Interesting!! I guess they figure most people are going to get into the throttle on these instead of being a Poko Joe, huh?
bar836 Posted September 18, 2009 Posted September 18, 2009 I would think the placement of the jug makes a difference also. The fronts will run cooler than the rears......
BigBoyinMS Posted September 18, 2009 Posted September 18, 2009 I would think the placement of the jug makes a difference also. The fronts will run cooler than the rears...... I thought about that but being water cooled I don't think there is much difference in temps from front to back. On my air-cooled Road Star it definitely seems to make a difference! The rear plugs on a Roadie are almost always sooty compared to the front. And there's only one carb so no adjusting for it. On mine the rear sooty plugs probably comes from the way I usually ride it. I ride it 3 miles to work and accelerate 'briskly' from a stop (or slow and turn) 14 times getting there.
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