Finished upgrades on a 05 220 - jetting problems?

kaptiankent

Member
May 8, 2008
18
0
Hi guys, I posted on here awhile ago about getting some upgrades for my 2005 KDX 220.

I have installed everything now.
-Wiseco piston
-Boysen Rad Valve
-FMF desert pipe
-FMF Q silencer

I have been riding on my bike a few times since doing everything, there is a big difference in power from the bottom to the top. I haven't noticed any loss on the bottom end power and I guess there is more on the top. But I usually ride in the lower rpm range anyway.

I still have the stock jetting.
main: 145
pilot: 42

The main is good because the bike really rips good at the top end, plug colour is a good tan.
Now on the low end which I assume is the pilot jet it seems to miss and sputter sometimes at about 1/4 throttle. I have adjusted the air screw and it makes it better but it still misses and sputters in that range. it runs best with the airscrew at 1.5 turns out.
I have also tried raising and lowering the needle one clip and it just makes it worse.

What could it be?
Thanks in advance
 

rus23

Member
Jun 2, 2008
12
0
Bigger Main jet. if your needle change didn't make a difference the amount of fuel getting thru the carb didn't change. The main jet seems pretty small, and who said a tan plug is good, I want mine brown, bordering on black. go up in the main till it sputters on top and then back it up a size. then start worrying about the low end.
 

kaptiankent

Member
May 8, 2008
18
0
rus23 said:
Bigger Main jet. if your needle change didn't make a difference the amount of fuel getting thru the carb didn't change. The main jet seems pretty small, and who said a tan plug is good, I want mine brown, bordering on black. go up in the main till it sputters on top and then back it up a size. then start worrying about the low end.


So you think that going one size richer on the main may clear up the 1/4 throttle miss/sputter.?

I will try the jet change later this week.


If anybody else has any pointer or thoughts let me know.
Thanks
 

rus23

Member
Jun 2, 2008
12
0
I think the main mau be limiting fuel flow at lower throttle openings. I have been told by very experienced two stroke racers to get the main jet about right before playing with anything else, the way you described it sounds like its lean on top. These engines run the best and make the most power just before they seize from getting too hot due to lack of fuel. I roadrace an aircooled rd 400 and a water cooled yamaha rz 350 and the radiators really make the jetting easier, the rz is a lot more forgiving. THat being said, my racing involves long straights that require full throttle 6th gear runs for 8-15 seconds, I've seized the air cooled rd at the end of front straights twice now due to improper jettiing. I have a permanent bump on my left shoulder thanks to one of them. The trail riding I do rarely involves full throttle straights, just a quick blip thru the gears and turn, so the jetting is not nearly as crucial to engine life. Get the main right and then move on, up in size(may need a 155, I have a 160 in my KDX 220)till it runs poorly and then back down one or so.

But, thats just me, I am so used to swapping jets I do it without thinking.
 

G. Gearloose

Pigment of ur imagination
Jul 24, 2000
709
0
rus23 said:
Bigger Main jet. if your needle change didn't make a difference the amount of fuel getting thru the carb didn't change. The main jet seems pretty small, and who said a tan plug is good, I want mine brown, bordering on black. go up in the main till it sputters on top and then back it up a size. then start worrying about the low end.

Changing the main will never clear up the 1/4 throttle position, this aint no chain saw.

egad that is soggy advise, literally.

and a 155 main in an unbored 33 mm carb = spooge and fouled plugs

You must like to waste gas and have less power.
My plug is white with a 2.5 mm soot ring
White means heat and heat equals power.
Plugs are meant to self-clean and need heat to do it.

Grey is the bad color.
 

whenfoxforks-ruled

Old MX Racer
~SPONSOR~
Oct 19, 2006
8,129
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Merrillville,Indiana

kaptiankent

Member
May 8, 2008
18
0
Well I was out for a ride yesterday and on the way home I ringed it out down the road and killed the engine. I coasted into my driveway and pulled the plug.

It was dark but had a gray color to it. I think I will need a bigger main.

It seems to run better when its warm out. So that would indicate its a little lean.
 

kaptiankent

Member
May 8, 2008
18
0
Hi Guys, I finally got a 148 main jet and stuck it in. Went for a ride today. It seemed to definitely run better. The temp was about 27C during the ride.

I did check the plug after a wide open straight. I looked down in the bottom and it was black. The insulator and tip was a brownish gray colour.

It seemed to run better throughout the rpm range. almost no miss/sputter in the lowend.

I was a little concerned about the plug having a gray colour on it but according to the jetting guide the insulator and tip mean nothing.

What do you guys think?
 

whenfoxforks-ruled

Old MX Racer
~SPONSOR~
Oct 19, 2006
8,129
2
Merrillville,Indiana
If it is a fresh plug, you can use it for reference as to being lean or rich on a given circuit. The only way you can view the plug for the main is to cut the threads off, or get a quality plug viewer. You can tell from riding it, get it to pull hard off bottom, all the way up. Make drastic changes so you can tell what lean is, when it gets erratic revs. Once you come down from blubbering rich, it will still be rich for a couple jet sizes. Experiment with the pilot, then the needle clip, then main.
 

kaptiankent

Member
May 8, 2008
18
0
Well it seems to run better now. I will still play with the jetting a bit just to see what difference it makes.

Thanks for your help sofar.
 
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