Not much from me lately, but I haven't been idle. Curious as to why my bike would run, but not idle, I went ahead and pulled the carbs. Let me say, I'm glad I did.
Not gonna lie- I'm not feeling bad about these carbs whatsoever. I've dealt with Mikuni's before (on my XS11). Compared to the Kei Hein carbs on my Goldwing, these things are a snap! Screw jets, only one primary air and fuel circuit (and one for the idle as well), rubber cv diaphragms.... I love it.
Sure enough, though, I found telltale traces of the consequences of no fuel filter...
Nothing gunked on, but a lot of that fine rust and particulate that loves to clog up idle jets. And clogged they were, at three of them. I found the best way to get them out of their home is to actually take a small screwdriver and grind it to shape- that way, they can come out, you can inspect them visually, and those passages can be blasted out much easier.
As far as the actual teardown- Carb 1 was great, carb 2 gave me some issues (float valve screw was frozen, and I accidentally bent the housing with my vice grips), and carb 3 was a nightmare. The PO had jacked up the pilot jets, so while I could get them unscrewed, they wouldn't fall past the threads for the cap. Ended up having to destroy them with an easy-out to remove them. So now I'm waiting on jets.
In the meantime, I turned my attention to some cosmetic issues. The main switch cover always annoyed me. It's a great idea, but after 30 years of use the plastic pin was wore down so much that the push nut couldn't keep it tight enough to the rest of the sidecover- it was so bad it would skip the stop and twist too far.
My solution? Cut off the post, carefully drill out what was left, epoxy in a bit of threaded rot (actually a bolt with the head cut off), and re-attach it to the sidecover with a washer and nut. So far, it seems to be working very well.
Next up was the headlight bucket. I was able to pull it from the fairing, but in addition to both of the light mounting holes being broken out, the PO had drilled a pair of holes in the upper back of the bucket to physically screw it into the fairing headlight adjuster. Faced with the choice of a $100 replacement bucket or $10 worth of JB PlasticWeld (which, BTW, is AMAZING), Bondo and Krylon, I chose the Bondo.
As stated, my jets should be arriving this week, so hopefully by the weekend I should have a runner. I really hope so, anyway. Along with powdercoating the headlight ears and blinkers AND painting my GL1200, this should be a busy (and hopefully productive) weekend.