'86 runs a few minutes, then dies - now what?

podfish

Member
May 14, 2007
28
0
I've got an old '86 KDX that's been bored to 240 (long before I got it). Since I can't afford to spend much on it, I'm hoping to get a good diagnosis rather than do a bunch of work that, while clearly would be better to do, isn't strictly necessary. Also, the bike only gets ridden a few times a year.
The symptoms:
It was running great in the morning, and I rode for about fifteen miles to man a checkpoint at an enduro. At the end of the day, it started right up, but ran very rough at anything between idle and full throttle. It seemed to have plenty of power at full throttle, though. I put in a new plug, which didn't change anything, and it gets me back (downhill) to the pits. Several months pass before I can get back to the bike (don't ask...).
I pulled the carb, top end, and airfilter, cleaned everything except the kips valves, checked the jets and needle and float, and expected that it'd be good to go. But no such luck. It started right up, still ran very rough at anything but full throttle, but this time it died after about two minutes of riding. It wouldn't start or even burp. I shut off the gas, let it sit a few minutes, and it repeated - will start up nicely, run briefly at full throttle, then die.
So I can't figure an explanation for these symptoms - it's not really what I'd expect with a stuck float or bad float level; it doesn't seem to be a clogged air passage or problem with the carb slide; fuel starvation doesn't seem to explain the rough running; it has 130+ psi compression; the piston showed no visible damage; and I don't see how a problem with the kips system could have this effect. I don't know whether the coil, or the CDI could fail like this, or if there's some issue with the stator coils that could do it.
I'll probably try to get new seals for the kips, and clean them all up, but before I spend money on a new piston etc. or replaceme any the electrical components, I'd like to have some reason to believe that would clear up my problem!!
 

dirt bike dave

Sponsoring Member
May 3, 2000
5,348
3
Stator problems are common on the older KDXs and can be very hard to diagnose, and they can be temperature sensitive.

When mine went bad on my '84, the bike got harder to start, then when it would get warm, the bike would die and not restart until it sat for awhile. Evenutally, it just would not start at all.

Rewinding the stator fixed it, but I was not sure that was the problem until I put the rewound stator in and it started.

It's hard to justify spending the money if you are not sure that is the problem, but given it is an old KDX and you have checked about everthing else, it could well be the stator.
 
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