I made one of those homemade synchronizers with the glass jars and o hooked it up and its working great..... But the two outside jars are full and the two inside jars are empty. Help me solve the mystery of the on going carb problem and I'll drink a beer for you. If it's better that we talk over the phone I will pm you my number. I just fixed the front fork seal so I'm not that retarded bit I'm still in need of some carb help. Thanks again ladies and gents
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It could be that the synch butterfly valve settings are way off and there's just a big vacuum difference between the inside and outside, or that (like GregS said) the empty ones aren't sealed well enough. One way to find out is to plug different jars into different vacuum ports to see if it's the vacuum or the jars that's the problem
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Was the bike running okay before trying to synch? Or did you just rebuild the carbs or something? If the carbs just had work done to them, they need to be bench-synched first... which basically means that you just eyeball the butterfly valve adjustments (the screw between carbs). Then you do the synchronization with a vacuum tool to fine tune it. You know which screws to turn to adjust the vacuum/butterfly-valves right?
It's the screws like the one in shadow here right in the center of the pic
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Try swapping the tubes anyway to check.
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Originally posted by usmckatana View PostI'm still learning the carbs world. I'll do the bench synch tomorrow after work to start from there. Anything else I should know? Again, thanks guys....
When I first synchronized mine, the settings were pretty far off... enough that all of the liquid was getting sucked from one bottle to the other. You just keep adjusting the screw until the liquid goes back over (your tubes should be set up so that it can get sucked back even if all of it goes one way).
One thing you will notice is that while all of the fluid is on one side, air will be going through the tube connecting them, which will make it bubble. If you are using water or oil (or transmission fluid or something like that) it does not matter if a little of it gets sucked into the engine (yeah, even water) due to the bubbling. It IS a major problem if mercury gets sucked in, which is one of the (rare/unlikely) problems with mercury stick vacuum tools. With a bottle manometer, the tubes should be set up so that basically only bubble vapor can get in, if anything.
Here's a thread I made when I made my homemade tool
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Wow... um, okay...
The fact that the fluid flows from one jar to the other... is what tells you that you need to adjust the screws, cause your carbs are out of sync.
Krey93 750 Kat
Modified Swingarm, 5.5 GSXR Rear with 180/55 and 520 Chain, 750 to 600 Tail conversion, more to come. Long Term Project build thread http://katriders.com/vb/showthread.php?t=96736
"I've done this a thousand times before. What could possibly go wron.... Ooops!"
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