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Fuel Injector cleaning 9 years 5 months ago #5103

  • samchar12
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What is the best way to clean the injectors in a ZN1300. The bike sat for 10 years and I am trying to get it running again. I am sure they are gunked up from sitting that long with just gas residue in them. Can I just sit them in cleaner or do they need to be professionally cleaned?

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Fuel Injector cleaning 9 years 5 months ago #5109

  • KZQ
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I've had good luck using a 12 volt battery with a 12 bulb inline as a current limiter to open and close the injector while spraying carb cleaner through it. Does this method get them clean? I was satisfied.

Is there a fire danger involved when carb cleaner and sparking contacts are used in close proximity? Use your best judgment.

Bill
1947 Indian Chief, 1968 BSA Shooting Star, 1970 BSA 650 Lightning, 1974 Kawasaki W3, 1976 KZ900 A4, 1979 KZ750 B4, 1979 KZ750 B4 Trike, 1980 KZ550, 1981 KZ1300, 1982 KZ1100 Spectre, 1985 Kawasaki ZN1300, 1987 Yamaha Trail Way, 2000 Honda Valkyrie Tourer, 1981 GL 1100, 2009 Yamaha RoadLiner S

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Fuel Injector cleaning 9 years 5 months ago #5113

  • RickG
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KZQ wrote: I've had good luck using a 12 volt battery with a 12 bulb inline as a current limiter to open and close the injector while spraying carb cleaner through it. Does this method get them clean? I was satisfied.

Is there a fire danger involved when carb cleaner and sparking contacts are used in close proximity? Use your best judgment.

Bill

I have much the same set-up that I use and have had a lot of success at getting old gummed up injectors working. I use a 9 volt battery that is used in smoke alarms.
Live your life so that the Westbro Baptist Church will want to picket your funeral
Z1300 A1 x 2

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Fuel Injector cleaning 9 years 5 months ago #5122

  • Toddh
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Cleaning any injector and having them open and close is a good start.

Having an injector shop taking it to the next level and balancing the fuel flow makes them run much more efficiently. They have the hardware and test equipment to make sure they are running they way they need to.

It doesn't cost much either, at least it shouldn't.

Just a suggestion.

T.
KZ1300 A-4 4TH 1300 IN 30 YEARS
KZ1000 D-3/ Z1R
ZX900 GPZ A-3
KZ750 E-1
K1200GT
CB750F 1978

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Fuel Injector cleaning 9 years 2 months ago #6282

  • samchar12
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So got a new fuel pressure regulator and it started right up. Observing the black smoke coming out both pipes I is running rich. Do I need to balance the cylinders or is this indicative of another problem?

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Fuel Injector cleaning 9 years 2 months ago #6285

  • trikebldr
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Use the supplement manual and go through all the tests on all of the peripheral input sensors to the DFI unit. They tell the DFI just how much fuel to squirt according to engine and atmospheric conditions. Sounds like your engine temp sensor might be bad, though. If it tells the DFI that the engine is always cold, that will richen the mixture. If the air temp sensor is bad, it, too, can mislead the DFI into thinking the air is really cold, requiring more fuel to go with the denser air. If your throttle position sensor is not adjusted perfectly, it will tell the DFI that the engine is trying to run faster than it really is and to add more fuel. And, there are lots of combinations of the inputs to make the DFI dump even more fuel.

Bottom line is, every sensor has to be working correctly for correct fuel mixture.

I'm new to this thread, but to clean my injectors I connected the fuel lines to a small auxilliary can filled with Seafoam, then powered up the fuel pump and used the 12 volt bulb method of driving the injectors from the battery. I ran it like this for over an hour, turning the injectors off and on several times during that hour. Then I let the whole setup sit for a couple of days, and repeated the process. Seafoam may work slowly, but it doesn't harm anything in the system, except the crud you want removed. I removed the whole injector body assembly and watched the spray patterns from each injector. I don't have pics of a correct spray pattern for these, but they were all exactly the same, so,.........

My next step was to soak and clean the bodies in Seafoam, too. The whole assembly looks brand new and orks like new! Seafoam will also not attack the viton shaft seals while cleaning.

Do I like Seafoam? You BET! It works great on fuel systems. It is a bit expensive, but I reuse it and run it through the filter on the above setup as I do the cleaning process. I've done three injector assemblies like this so far. Yep, I do have two sets sitting on the shelf just waiting their turn! (look for me in a future episode of "Hoarders"! I'll be the one sitting in a pile of parts, drinking from a Seafoam can!)

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