It was already preset to 14.2v so I left it alone. I should add that at idle, I'll have high 12v to low 13v. Also, you need a little rpm blip to get it charging. Cruising around I see 13.6 to 14.2.
I wanted you to check that the timing advances with rpm. Your timing is set at idle so that the timing light shows the 10 degree line to the right of the LF mark in the window (I think you have your idle timing in the wrong place if you are firing on "F"). Now have a friend roll on the throttle slowly to bring the revs to 4000 rpm while you hold the strobe and watch the timing window. If all is well, you should see the timing advance from 10 degrees BTDC up the various marks on the flywheel and max out with at least 36 degrees of advance if your advance mechanism is working properly. Here is a picture of what the flywheel marks represent:you suggested that I should advance my timing
Okay I see now. Yeah initially I timed it to the LF tick after you mentioned advancing it i thought you meant idle timing. Ill bring it back to the factory mark. Would it hurt to ride it 6 miles back to the garage with idle timing at the 20 degree mark?I wanted you to check that the timing advances with rpm. Your timing is set at idle so that the timing light shows the 10 degree line to the right of the LF mark in the window (I think you have your idle timing in the wrong place if you are firing on "F"). Now have a friend roll on the throttle slowly to bring the revs to 4000 rpm while you hold the strobe and watch the timing window. If all is well, you should see the timing advance from 10 degrees BTDC up the various marks on the flywheel and max out with at least 36 degrees of advance if your advance mechanism is working properly. Here is a picture of what the flywheel marks represent:
View attachment 38505
You will, and the bike will be just fine doing that.Would it hurt to ride it 6 miles back to the garage with idle timing at the 20 degree mark?
That is the procedure I use. The dial on the strobe is handy if you don't have as many advance marks as this bike does. In that case, you can roll on the throttle and then turn the dial to bring the LF mark back into the window and then read the degrees of advance on the dial.do you set the dial to zero and strobe it making sure the idle timing is bang on? Then run the throttle up and see if it advances? If thats the procedure then yes it does advance and rather abruptly and more like at 2k rpm. Bike won't even make it to 4k... could it possibly be some worn out springs on those weights?
You know, sometimes you just need to go back to basics, especially when you run out of rope on the path you are on. I agree that you have not wasted time so far. I am running along a similar path getting my bike fine tuned. I too am back at the carb mixture (specifically the pilot mixture screws) and it is producing surprising results. If you are a home mechanic without access to a gas analyzer or a dyno, learning as much as you can from what you have done and then going back to the start is the only way to really get these things running right.So I've come back to carb tuning
3 turns out on the pilot mix screws is a pretty common starting point, but if the engine is at 4000 rpm at idle with that mix screw setting, you need to lower the idle back down to 1250 or at least below 2000 rpm with the idle speed screw under and between the carbs. Having idle rpm go up when opening the pilot mixture screws is normal as increasing rpm is the sign that you are moving from a lean condition towards a proper idle mixture. If you open the pilot mix screw and nothing happens with idle rpm, it means you are past the optimum idle mixture for that carb and are going too rich. If you go past say 4 turns out on the pilot mix screw and idle rpm is still increasing, that is a sign that your pilot jet is too small.3 turns out and its getting me up to 4k rpm
No, that's me reading too much into what I look at!Thats me being a poor communicator
That is sounds like a needle jet/jet needle mixture issue as you will have definitely transitioned off of the pilot circuit and onto the mid-range circuit. Lowering the clip position on the needle would be a step to take to reduce the flat spot. It could also be related to the shape of the needle you have installed.Im dealing with a flatspot that starts at 3k rpm