I received a set of carbs several days ago, that the owner claimed couldn't be adjusted to get a smooth idle or a sync. Went through my established routine disassembly, flushing etc. and did the bench static adjustments that have always yielded good results. Other than some debris that flushed out using "The Tool”, I had no reason to suspect any concerns once installed on my engine.
The carbs would not idle smoothly - in fact so roughly that the back-lashing made the engine sound like it was going to toss parts. Despite vacuum syncing perfectly on the bench, the vacuum on the running engine was barely 3"hg. per gauge. Back to the bench and then the bike 3 more times with no better results. EVERYTHING was CLEAN! It was easy to find the offending cylinders by blocking the idle air mixing intakes one at a time. Got it narrowed down to the right hand carb. Block both idle air ports and the engine smoothed out significantly. Running lean!
Completely mystified, I put them aside for several days while I went through all the scenarios. I sat down one evening and spent several hours "Googling" related topics to no avail. Then went to three familiar sights: Mikuni, Keihin and Dellorto. I found a common theme related to jets, from these reputable manufactures. They flow test every jet for quality control and indexing and,…… their jets have very specific high tolerance details milled into their design to assure the correct fuel-flow pattern. This was the light-bulb moment!
Despite visually inspecting the idle jets and determining they were clean I removed them and put each one under a microscope.
Long story short; If you want to render these jets totally useless go ahead and poke some piece of wire through it. Those “Jet Cleaners” ……..nothing more than Oxy/Acy tip cleaners – just as bad.
If you have to clean debris from a jet and lacquer thinner and compressed air won’t do the job buy some propane/natural gas pilot jet reamers and do it right. Or….just replace them with new jets.
The orifice is factory milled and reamed to guarantee a very specific flow pattern and should be shiny smooth.
Sticking a piece of wire into it and twisting:
The end of a piece of wire will gouge and lift material that with totally screw-up the flow pattern.
You have to look closely but the jet material has been shaved and lifted.
This is the end of one of those "Jet Cleaners" Same results as a random piece of wire cut with typical wire cutters
The end-burr will destroy the jets characteristics.
A couple of very fine Gas appliance pilot-jet reamers.
The solution: 6 new jets !
I've rebuilt 12 set in the past 3 years with no problems setting them up. Lucky, now I think. What have I learned: Holding an idle jet up to a light source doesn't guarantee the jet is good. From now on, every jet goes under the scope !