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skyhawk04kilo
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   Posted 11/3/2009 1:21 PM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
I've just installed a jet kit, and now I'm trying to get things tuned up correctly. The jet kit included 3 sizes of main jets, so I started with the middle one like the manual said. I am pretty sure I need to move up or down a size, but I don't know which way to go.

Here's what the bike is doing:

- From 0 to about 3/4 throttle, it pulls unbelievably hard. It's like a whole new bike as compared to stock. This tells me the pilot jets and needle jets are good.

- When going from 3/4 to full throttle, the bike has a noticeable decrease in power. This tells me the main jets are wrong.

I don't know the preferred way of checking whether the main jets are lean or rich. I've heard you should run the bike at full throttle for a few seconds, then immediately kill the engine and check the plugs to see if they're white or black, but I'm skeptical that only a few seconds of running will color the plugs. What do you guys think?


2001 Suzuki Bandit 1200S

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Andy VH
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   Posted 11/3/2009 2:40 PM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
The procedure is to run the bike at a throttle position that gives the fuel system a chance to stabilize. That means at least a mile of running at full throttle. Pick a location where you can do that, in a gear that allows you to stay within the speed limit. For a bike like your Bandit, that may mean 2nd or 1st gear. Ride it at wide open throttle for at least a mile, then while at that speed and engine rpm, at the same time, pull in the clutch/close the throttle/and hit the engine kill switch. Let the bike coast down to a stop, and then remove the plugs to read the color. I'd do that first with the current main jets to see if the color shows it to be a bit rich.

Assuming that three of the the new main jet sizes are all larger than the stock main jets, I'd first opt for the smallest of the three jets to see how the bike responds. If you get the power back and the plugs are a light tan color I'd say its good. If you just put in the largest of the three main jet sizes, and it does not produce more power or response, then it needs to be jetted down to the smallest of the main jets size.

I once test rode a BMW K1200GT hard in 1st gear to clear it out after too much idling and putting around the shop. That bike would easily do 70mph in 1st gear before it would limit out against the rev limiter.


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skyhawk04kilo
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   Posted 11/3/2009 4:00 PM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
Andy VH said...
The procedure is to run the bike at a throttle position that gives the fuel system a chance to stabilize. That means at least a mile of running at full throttle. Pick a location where you can do that, in a gear that allows you to stay within the speed limit. For a bike like your Bandit, that may mean 2nd or 1st gear. Ride it at wide open throttle for at least a mile, then while at that speed and engine rpm, at the same time, pull in the clutch/close the throttle/and hit the engine kill switch. Let the bike coast down to a stop, and then remove the plugs to read the color. I'd do that first with the current main jets to see if the color shows it to be a bit rich.

Assuming that three of the the new main jet sizes are all larger than the stock main jets, I'd first opt for the smallest of the three jets to see how the bike responds. If you get the power back and the plugs are a light tan color I'd say its good. If you just put in the largest of the three main jet sizes, and it does not produce more power or response, then it needs to be jetted down to the smallest of the main jets size.

I once test rode a BMW K1200GT hard in 1st gear to clear it out after too much idling and putting around the shop. That bike would easily do 70mph in 1st gear before it would limit out against the rev limiter.


First let me ask this question: Do the main jets affect performance at full throttle or at the top of the rpm range? If I ride around at 3000rpm with the throttle all the way open, are the carbs drawing fuel from the main jets or one of the other jets? What about 1/2 throttle at 10,000rpm?

My bike will do 70mph at the redline in 1st and at full throttle it will just bounce off the rev limiter. I'd rather not do that for a mile.

I'm thinking of just putting it in 2nd on the freeway and riding it for a mile with the throttle all the way open and riding the brakes to keep the bike at the speed limit. 2nd gear at freeway speeds should be about 7 or 8000rpm. I hope my engine and brake rotors don't simultaneously explode...


2001 Suzuki Bandit 1200S

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Andy VH
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   Posted 11/3/2009 7:00 PM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
All carbs use jets that "blend" from one overlapped rpm range to another. No one jet system is exclusive to a specific rpm range. So at the start at the top 1/3 of the rpm range the carbs are taking fuel through the needle jet/main jet at the same time. Then as the throttle continues to open, the needle eventually raises completely out of the main jet and the fuel ratio is determined soley by the main jet. But you won't be able to ride around at 3,000 in any gear and be anywhere near wide open throttle.

Not sure if your bike has CV style carbs, where the carb slide is actually moved by the diaphragm above the slide. The throttle actually only opens the butterfly which varies the vacuum signal to the slide diaphragm. If your bike has non-CV carbs, the throttle actually moves the slides directly. You can tell this if your bike has butterfly plates, it the has CV carbs.

I would not ride the brakes agaisnt the engine, you could overheat the rotors and actually warp them. Better off to simply ride slower in the lowest gear and just stay below the speed limit. Also, the expressway is not a good place for this type of test riding. Suzuki engines can easily handle the high rpms, so I would not worry about constatn speed near the redline. Also, you do not need to ride against the rev limiter. All you need to do is get the engine breathing at wide open throttle.

Now, this tip come from Kevin Cameron (a highly regarded cycle tuner and author) in his book "Sportbike Performance Handbook", page 55. Kevin recommends finding a place to safely run at wide open throttle, run the bike at wide open for about a mile or two at a consistent high rpm. Then slightly close the throttle and note if there is a slgiht GAIN in maximum revs. If there is, the engine is running rich and should be jetted down. You could do that with your current main jetting before changing anything.


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skyhawk04kilo
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   Posted 11/3/2009 9:07 PM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
Okay I'm a little confused as to how carbs work, maybe you can help me out with this Andy (or anyone else). I've been using this website as a reference since I don't know anyone that I can ask about this stuff. Scroll down to the section titled "Carburetor Jetting Troubleshooting".

www.iwt.com.au/mikunicarb.htm

First, the carbs do have butterfly plates and the slide moves independent of the plates, so these must be CV-type carbs. They are Mikuni BSR36SS carburetors. Here are my questions:

Andy said...
But you won't be able to ride around at 3,000 in any gear and be anywhere near wide open throttle.


What do you mean by "wide open throttle"? Are you referring to the opening made by the slide or the grip? What you're saying seems to conflict with the website, which says "If the engine is running poorly at 3/4 to full throttle, the main jet is the likely problem. While jetting carburetors, place a piece of tape on the throttle housing. Place another piece of tape on the throttle grip and draw a line (while the throttle is at idle) straight across from one piece of tape to the other. When these two lines are lined up, the engine will be idling. Now open the throttle to full throttle and draw another line directly across from it on the throttle housing. At this point, there should be two lines on the throttle housing, and one on the throttle grip. Now find the half-way point between both of the lines on the throttle housing. Make a mark and this will show when the throttle is at half throttle. Divide the spaces up even again until idle, 1/4, 1/2, 3/4, and full throttle positions are known. These lines will be used to quickly find the exact throttle opening while jetting. "

So the website is saying that when I open the throttle grip all the way, the engine is running on the main jets. But what you're saying is that even if the throttle grip is opened all the way, I can't be running on the main jets at low RPM. If that's the case, then I have a totally different problem, because my bike starts to hesitate when the throttle grip is opened all the way, and it doesn't necessarily stumble at the top of the RPM range.

Please help! confused


2001 Suzuki Bandit 1200S

Post Edited (skyhawk04kilo) : 11/4/2009 5:10:34 AM GMT

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Richard47
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   Posted 11/4/2009 3:16 AM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
I would say that if your bike is running well at high revs on a moderate throttle but stumbles on full throttle, the main jet is too big. This is because at a moderate throttle opening the jet needle is still partly within the needle jet and so preventing the main jet from taking full effect.


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CaddmannQ
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   Posted 11/4/2009 6:43 AM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
skyhawk04kilo said...
Okay I'm a little confused as to how carbs work, ...
 
So the website is saying that when I open the throttle grip all the way, the engine is running on the main jets. But what you're saying is that even if the throttle grip is opened all the way, I can't be running on the main jets at low RPM. If that's the case, then I have a totally different problem, because my bike starts to hesitate when the throttle grip is opened all the way, and it doesn't necessarily stumble at the top of the RPM range.
You have to consider how much vacuum the engine is making. when you crack the throttles open hard from low RPM the vacuum the engine can pull will drop rapidly. The air velocity through the carb can drop until fuel won't be sucked up from the bowl and the bike will hesitate or bog.
 
The CV slides prevent that by not rising until the engine can pull a good vacuum.
 
The thing is, you need to know where the slides are, so in addition to the tape and marks you must fit a vacuum gage. watch the needle to see if the vacuum recovers. Wide open + high vacuum means you'll be on the main jets. Wide open + low vacuum means you're still on the low end of the needle.
 
skyhawk04kilo said...- When going from 3/4 to full throttle, the bike has a noticeable decrease in power. This tells me the main jets are wrong.
 
One thing to consider when hopping up a bike is that not just needle size & length, but the rate of taper is important.
 
My experience is that it's way too easy to think the main jet is small, when in fact the needle needs to be shorter & have a blunter taper.



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2004 Nomad 1500............"Baggins"
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skyhawk04kilo
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   Posted 11/4/2009 7:02 AM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
So if I ride at 10,000RPM, but don't necessarily have the grip all the way to full, I may still be at full throttle?


2001 Suzuki Bandit 1200S

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Richard47
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   Posted 11/4/2009 9:26 AM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
There is not a lot of difference in the air flow through the carb when the butterfly is nearly fully open and fully open. But in your case it must be making some difference to the vacuum or the bike would run just the same. Was the bike running OK before you fitted the rebuild kit? Do you know the size of the main jets you took out? Is the needle exactly the same and did you fit the clip in the same position as before (assuming it has more than one groove)? 


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skyhawk04kilo
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   Posted 11/4/2009 9:37 AM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
Richard47 said...
There is not a lot of difference in the air flow through the carb when the butterfly is nearly fully open and fully open. But in your case it must be making some difference to the vacuum or the bike would run just the same. Was the bike running OK before you fitted the rebuild kit? Do you know the size of the main jets you took out? Is the needle exactly the same and did you fit the clip in the same position as before (assuming it has more than one groove)?


It behaved the same way before I jetted it (full open throttle pulled less hard than 3/4). Main jets were 100, new ones are 110 (I also have 107.5 and 112.5). Needle is the same, the clip is in the same position but it has 5 shims under the clip now, as per the instructions.


2001 Suzuki Bandit 1200S

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Andy VH
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   Posted 11/4/2009 11:56 AM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
Skyhawk04kilo, your comment, "If I ride around at 3000rpm with the throttle all the way open, are the carbs drawing fuel from the main jets or one of the other jets?" is what I responded to. You can't ride at 3,000 rpm engine, in any gear, at wide open throttle. At most, maybe fifth or sixth gear at 3,000 rpm may be 1/3 throttle at most, until you reach a hill. I'm referring to the grip, which on your bike with CV carbs controls the butterfly, through which the vacuum signal determines how much the slide moves up.

As far as carb jetting, each circuit blends into the next. Idle (pilot) circuit blends in the midrange needle/jet at around 2,000 rpm. The needle/jet meters the fuel into the airstream through most of the mid-range engine rpm, from 2,000 up to around 5,000 rpm. The needle/jet blends into the main jet at about 6,000 rpm up to about 1,000 rpm of redline, at which point the fuel is metered entirely by the main jet. Most carbs will draw some fuel through the idle jet throughout the rpm range, but its affect is minimal much above idle.


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Post Edited (Andy VH) : 11/4/2009 8:01:11 PM GMT

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skyhawk04kilo
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   Posted 11/4/2009 1:13 PM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
Andy VH said...
Skyhawk04kilo, your comment, "If I ride around at 3000rpm with the throttle all the way open, are the carbs drawing fuel from the main jets or one of the other jets?" is what I responded to. You can't ride at 3,000 rpm engine, in any gear, at wide open throttle. At most, maybe fifth or sixth gear at 3,000 rpm may be 1/3 throttle at most, until you reach a hill. I'm referring to the grip, which on your bike with CV carbs controls the butterfly, through which the vacuum signal determines how much the slide moves up.

As far as carb jetting, each circuit blends into the next. Idle (pilot) circuit blends in the midrange needle/jet at around 2,000 rpm. The needle/jet meters the fuel into the airstream through most of the mid-range engine rpm, from 2,000 up to around 5,000 rpm. The needle/jet blends into the main jet at about 6,000 rpm up to about 1,000 rpm of redline, at which point the fuel is metered entirely by the main jet. Most carbs will draw some fuel through the idle jet throughout the rpm range, but its affect is minimal much above idle.


Andy, I'm sorry, but I still don't understand what you mean. Are you saying I can't ride at wide open throttle at 3000 RPM while maintaining speed? Because I can certainly open the throttle all the way at 3000 RPM...

I just went out on the highway and rode for about 10 miles of normal riding, then 1 mile in 1st gear at a hair over 10,000 RPM. I'm concerned though, since the marks on the grip showed I was only at 1/2 throttle. Does that mean I wasn't in the range of the main jet yet? I've attached pics of the plugs that I took at the rest stop where I coasted in. The plugs all looked very white, except for #1, which was only slightly whiter than normal. So I'm running lean, right?

Again, sorry if I keep asking the same questions, I just want to make sure I understand how this stuff works before I start tinkering.


2001 Suzuki Bandit 1200S


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Richard47
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   Posted 11/4/2009 2:17 PM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.

You are most certainly not using full throttle in first gear at a constant 10K. Your Bandit will only need maybe 10-15bhp to maintain 10,000rpm in first and the amount of gas consumed to give that speed is not enough to bring the main jets into play. A plug chop needs to be conducted with the motor working hard so that the main jets are delivering fuel. Your plug chop in first seems to indicate that the bike is running a little lean with the slide/needle only a little off the stop, which is where it would have been in those circumstances.

Remember that with a CV carb you are only moving the butterfly with the twist grip, not the slide. The position of the slide is what counts and this is governed by the amount of vacuum created by the airflow in the venturi which is also the amount of vacuum at the top of the diaphragm. The difference between this vacuum and atmospheric pressure is what causes the slide to rise.


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skyhawk04kilo
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   Posted 11/4/2009 3:07 PM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
Richard47 said...
You are most certainly not using full throttle in first gear at a constant 10K. Your Bandit will only need maybe 10-15bhp to maintain 10,000rpm in first and the amount of gas consumed to give that speed is not enough to bring the main jets into play. A plug chop needs to be conducted with the motor working hard so that the main jets are delivering fuel. Your plug chop in first seems to indicate that the bike is running a little lean with the slide/needle only a little off the stop, which is where it would have been in those circumstances.

Remember that with a CV carb you are only moving the butterfly with the twist grip, not the slide. The position of the slide is what counts and this is governed by the amount of vacuum created by the airflow in the venturi which is also the amount of vacuum at the top of the diaphragm. The difference between this vacuum and atmospheric pressure is what causes the slide to rise.


Okay, someone needs to just write down the steps for testing the main jets, because you're all giving me vague advice and you're contradicting each other. Andy says to "select a gear which allows you to stay below the speed limit at full throttle, but don't ride the bike against the rev limiter and don't ride the brakes." That is impossible. The bike will do 140mph, there's no way to ride it at full throttle for a mile and not break the speed limit.

This is getting really frustrating... just tell me how to test this.


2001 Suzuki Bandit 1200S

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   Posted 11/4/2009 5:06 PM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
Legally, you'll need to go to Bonneville or get it on a dynomometer.


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2004 Nomad 1500............"Baggins"
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   Posted 11/4/2009 9:28 PM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
I think I get it now. I'm referring to maintaining a STEADY 3,000 rpm at wide open throttle, which is not possible. I think you're referring to riding the bike at 3,000 rpm and then cranking open the throttle to wide open. Sure, you can do that in whatever gear you want to do that in. It still counts more that you find out at what engine speed the throttle is turned completely open, and run the engine at that speed for about a mile to get a true plug color for that condition.

So you are saying you cannot ride the bike at wide open throttle in 1st gear and be anywhere near the speed limit? Then you'll either need to find a remote area where you can run in 1st or 2nd gear and exceed the speed limit long enough to get a wide open plug reading. Or find a dealer with an exhaust gas analyzer to determine the more accurate exhaust gas condition to indicate lean or rich conditions.

Oh, the plug color, to me, looks to indicate a bit lean condition. Jet up in size to run a bit richer.


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Post Edited (Andy VH) : 11/5/2009 5:31:32 AM GMT

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Richard47
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   Posted 11/5/2009 7:58 AM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
I can see why you are confused, skyhawk. However, reading through the posts again I think we are all on the same page. The bottom line is that to check the main jet you have to have the bike pulling hard so that the main jet is actually being used to the full. You won't do that at a constant speed in first or second or even third because you will have to back off the throttle to avoid over revving the motor or bouncing off the limiter. As soon as you do that the slide will lower and the other jets etc are doing more than the main jet. This does mean that you will be going pretty fast to do the plug chop. The other way is to get the bike on a dyno.


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skyhawk04kilo
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   Posted 11/5/2009 8:45 AM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
I think I'm going to change the main jets to 112.5 and see if the problem is better or worse. If it's worse, I'll just change the jet out to 107.5 and see how it runs then.

Thanks for your advice guys.


2001 Suzuki Bandit 1200S

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   Posted 11/5/2009 11:05 AM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
It's not just bike/engine speed or throttle position that determines jet requirements.

It's the load on the engine. More load requires more fuel.

To test this increase load without increasing test speed range.

Does the bike perform better or worse when going up a steep hill than on the flat?
Try it and see.

IMO, you should consider what Andy said about leanness.

You're not running right between 3/4 and WOT.

When running hard at 1/2 throttle, you're even a bit lean.

Now you want to correct this by leaning the main jet?

I think the needle isn't richening the upper mid-range quickly enough.

It's not coming out of the jet soon enough to supply fuel when you're not quite fully ready for the main jet.

Several things can make this happen faster:

Shorter needle

Faster taper on the needle

Raise the needle

Lighten the slides or reduce the slide spring rate

I don't think you have the skills to mod the slides or springs

I suggest tweaking the needles before condemning the main jet.


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2004 Nomad 1500............"Baggins"
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   Posted 11/5/2009 11:50 AM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
Cadd, he has already raised the needles using shims under the needle clip. To richen up the midrange a bit more, and improve the blend into the main jet currently in the carbs, you can LOWER the clip one notch. This will raise the needle position relative to the main jet. Which means the taper of the needle will be out of the main jet sooner, making the mix richer.

You can still use the shims, but move the needle clip down one notch. Then, if the bike is a touch on the rich side, you can remove one shim at a time until you get the exact right mix.

This proves the logic of only using a jet kit designed for the bike (as Skyhawk has done here) and for the way a bike is modified intake and exhaust wise. Anyone who claims he can simply jet up a bike without a planned kit is just shooting in the dark. And more than likely the bike will be running much worse than stock.


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skyhawk04kilo
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   Posted 11/5/2009 1:21 PM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
CaddmannQ said...
It's not just bike/engine speed or throttle position that determines jet requirements.

It's the load on the engine. More load requires more fuel.

To test this increase load without increasing test speed range.

Does the bike perform better or worse when going up a steep hill than on the flat?
Try it and see.

IMO, you should consider what Andy said about leanness.

You're not running right between 3/4 and WOT.

When running hard at 1/2 throttle, you're even a bit lean.

Now you want to correct this by leaning the main jet?

I think the needle isn't richening the upper mid-range quickly enough.

It's not coming out of the jet soon enough to supply fuel when you're not quite fully ready for the main jet.

Several things can make this happen faster:

Shorter needle

Faster taper on the needle

Raise the needle

Lighten the slides or reduce the slide spring rate

I don't think you have the skills to mod the slides or springs

I suggest tweaking the needles before condemning the main jet.


Thanks for the ideas Cadd. The kit I bought added 5 shims under each needle, and also said to cut 25mm off of each spring, which I did. There are 5 shims under each needle already, but I have a bunch more. Judging by what I've read so far, my lean plugs from the highway the other day indicate the needle jets are too lean, not the main jets. To richen them up, would you go in increments of 1 shim or 2 or more?


2001 Suzuki Bandit 1200S

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skyhawk04kilo
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   Posted 11/5/2009 1:31 PM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
Andy VH said...
This proves the logic of only using a jet kit designed for the bike (as Skyhawk has done here) and for the way a bike is modified intake and exhaust wise. Anyone who claims he can simply jet up a bike without a planned kit is just shooting in the dark. And more than likely the bike will be running much worse than stock.


You've got that right. Even the kit instructions tell you the base settings are only a starting point. I can't imagine trying to do this from scratch...

One thing to remember is that the kit is designed to be used with the stock exhaust or with an aftermarket pipe. The base settings are probably somewhere in the middle and not exactly where they need to be for my stock exhaust.


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Richard47
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   Posted 11/5/2009 1:35 PM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
The only thing I will add is only to make one change at a time. You can't evaluate any difference if you do two or more things together.


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CaddmannQ
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   Posted 11/6/2009 6:18 AM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
Adding shims may not be the answer, because the rate of taper on the needle is probably wrong.

Eventually, adding shims causes the needle not to close enough & then you have to back off the pilot/idle circuits to compensate, while it still doesn't open up fast enough in the midrange.

Also, adding shims adds weight to the slide in a situation where the slide really wants to be lighter.

Cutting springs changes the dynamic response of the slide: cutting a little is OK, but cutting more may make the slides start to bounce, because you've already added weight but have not added damping to the system.

I think the solution will be found in removing all the shims and putting in shorter, blunter (and therefore lighter) needles.

This will make the fuel come on earlier, stronger, and more suddenly.

Perhaps the selection is much better today than back in the old days (before I wised up and went to fuel injection), but I was never able to buy the exact needles I wanted so I always ended up just making them from small nails. This requires much patience to develop the correct shape and length and to get them both the same. All I had to work with was a small drill motor with a modified chuck, some sand paper and files, a caliper, and a micrometer. It was basically done by hand.

I was typically just tuning singles & twins. I never had to make 4 needles exactly the same (!) but certainly other people have done it.

Hopefully nowadays the selection is better & you can buy just what you need.


"When in doubt, ride."
Cadd................................Clovis CA
2004 Nomad 1500............"Baggins"
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skyhawk04kilo
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   Posted 11/6/2009 9:10 AM (GMT -8)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
CaddmannQ said...
Adding shims may not be the answer, because the rate of taper on the needle is probably wrong.

Eventually, adding shims causes the needle not to close enough & then you have to back off the pilot/idle circuits to compensate, while it still doesn't open up fast enough in the midrange.

Also, adding shims adds weight to the slide in a situation where the slide really wants to be lighter.

Cutting springs changes the dynamic response of the slide: cutting a little is OK, but cutting more may make the slides start to bounce, because you've already added weight but have not added damping to the system.

I think the solution will be found in removing all the shims and putting in shorter, blunter (and therefore lighter) needles.

This will make the fuel come on earlier, stronger, and more suddenly.

Perhaps the selection is much better today than back in the old days (before I wised up and went to fuel injection), but I was never able to buy the exact needles I wanted so I always ended up just making them from small nails. This requires much patience to develop the correct shape and length and to get them both the same. All I had to work with was a small drill motor with a modified chuck, some sand paper and files, a caliper, and a micrometer. It was basically done by hand.

I was typically just tuning singles & twins. I never had to make 4 needles exactly the same (!) but certainly other people have done it.

Hopefully nowadays the selection is better & you can buy just what you need.


I'm sure Dale Walker considered those things when he made the kit.


2001 Suzuki Bandit 1200S

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