Ol'89r
LIFETIME SPONSOR
- Jan 27, 2000
- 6,958
- 45
Dr Rockso said:but i shouldn't have to constantly need to adjust the idle . i had it somewhere good , rode around the house 4 times and when i pulled back up the idle was very low , then when the bike cools off and i start it the idle is way high , what could be causing this ?
That is normal. Don't try to adjust the idle until the bike is fully warmed up. If you adjust it when it is cold, it will be too low when it warms up. Japanese bikes are very cold blooded, especially Hondas.
Your feeler gauges don't make sense, 2.54mm is .100 thousands and 1.27mm is .050 thousands. That is too much clearance. If you have a .004 thousands feeler gauge, you could use that on both valves and just for testing purposes, you would be in the ball park. Set the intake with a little drag on the feeler gauge and set the exhaust without any drag. You should be able to hear and feel a slight click on the rocker arm.
I would reset the valves using the proper gauges and then check your compression. If the valves were tight and ran for any period of time, you may have a burnt valve. A burnt valve will also cause an erratic idle. Your carb depends upon a certain amount of vacuum to work properly. If the engine is worn, (bad rings or valves) you won't have enough vacuum for the carb to work properly. If when you check your compression the reading is low, squirt a little oil in the cylinder and check it again. If the pressure comes up you have bad rings. If the pressure doesn't come up, you have bad valves or both. Be sure to hold the throttle wide open when you do the compression check.
You can tune on your carb all day long but if the engine isn't tight you are wasting your time.