I'm really finding your videos to be an invaluable source of learning! As a new home mechanic I'm in a brave new world. You explain everything so clearly and in a manner that even newbies like myself can understand. You could make a fortune with all this knowledge your sharing Max, and I don't mean as a mechanic :) Many thanks!
That's great man! Glad to have you join the at home shade tree crew lol. I've learned and done my own things as much as possible for the last 10 years. Always learning. Best way to learn is to dive in head first sometimes!
I had a real misfire and exhaust popping after a winter layup without draining the fuel. I needed to strip the carbs and clean the jets. As part of my diagnosis I tweaked the balance by ear and made things worse. So back to basics and try to set a datum balance was the next step. I found this video and did an interpretation using a small drill bit instead of the needle and a small piece of wood to lift the jets enough to measure. They were well out of synch and using this process worked amazingly well. After the rebuild the bike runs better than it has ever done in my 8 years of ownership. I have decided not to put in the garage for a professional balance because I don't expect much of an improvement. So thanks again for this video and I recommend it highly to anyone struggling with the same frustrations. Cheers, Tony
Nice first step. I use a short length of copper wire (cos it’s soft) adjust down on to it so that it JUST holds, then tip the carbs up and unwind the adjuster letting the wire drop out. Same with the other carb(s). Hi from the uk.
Ive never even sat on a bike before. Bought a thundercat and it needed a carb cleaning. You saved me soo much mony and my cat runs way better. Thanks dude! subbed
Thanks so much for these videos, I happen to be working on my GS 450 L at the moment and now I have the confidence to tackle the carbs. Keep up the good work!!
Really nice straight forward bench sync video , we did alot of dynamic synching in college but this video explains things quite simply for those who have little or no mechanical knowledge , very well done sir , keep up the good work
hey man i'm restoring a 1980 yamaha xs1100 and i don't know nothing about motorcycles (i don't even know how to ride one) and your videos have helped me really alot. many thanks from Juarez Mexico.
Hello Sir, Thank you for the video. With your instruction and taking my time, I was able to sync my 1993 Yamaha XV Virago750 carburettors. Many thanks. Al
I was looking for an easy and simple basic set up method for my 4 carbs on a Suzuki GSX 1100 F and here I found it. Thank you very much mrmaxstorey. I will try your set up method this afternoon and I hope it will work. Best regards from germany
Thanks for making this video Max ! So many are afraid of malty carb set ups but I have learned that they are not as bad as I thought Working on my old KZ .
Thanks max. Been looking for this post for a week now. My XV 535 balance is well out, can't start it at all. Now I can reset the carbs back to a 'factory setting' thanks to you. Now to trawl through you other vids. ;-)
Back in my glory days of working on my Yamaha xj700 maxim I had all the good tools. Motion pro carb sync, yics stick 25$ tool yamaha makes you buy so you can sync em. cheap temporary plastic gas tank to run bike without original tank installed, up sized jets as far as I could go. Being a great motorcyclist begins in the garage. Trial an error method will get your machine back on the road. I even had this special tool that was a spark plug that you could look inside cylinder see what color your fuel/air mix was burning at. 75$ .
As usual, another great vid that is easy for everyone to follow. I think you do a great job of making people understand that they can fix their own bikes and not be intimidated!
You'll probably be ok to just put them back on and back together so long as the adjustment linkage was not touched. The thing about bench syncing is it just puts it back to stock, which is fine, but what your bike really needs is for all the individual carbs to be adjusted to their individual cylinders, which have different needs as they wear independently. So go ahead and reassemble do a dynamic sync when you get a chance
This method gets your carbs back to their baseline setting. its pretty close, but for optimal performance and smoothness, you should do a dynamic sync, using a manometer or the gauges
Thanks for the awesome videos sir, You do a vary good job. I've done lots of work on my car but I'm starting work on my first bike and your videos have been a life saver.
You are so right ! Mine could be a little better but they are so close I thought I would stop . Before it was a dog but now it burns the rear tire off and at times makes you think you need a change of pants !
Hi again and Greetings from India. I love your videos. I know of a better way to sync butterfly valves only on inline carbs with same side and positions. Pull out the idling screw so that the valves sit close completely. Hold the carbs against daylight and see through the intake side and press on the throttle to make sure both valves rise together.
This is an amazing video it is exactly what i was looking for because i have a 87 gs450l and you are using just that for your prop. love it keep it up.
Inside the mouth of most motorcycle carbs is a pin head marker. The butterfly is adjusted until half way over the marker point for correct adjustments. 🙂👍
Ok so it idles off of choke now... I actually had to back out the idle screw it worked so well. Took it for a quick stroll and same result under a load . 15 mph and she falls flat, stumbles and lean pops... I wonder if it's bad gas.. The bike has been sitting for a while..
Thanks a lot man..... Really i think this is what i need to do for my Honda CD250U carburetors, I've been having a problem of right cylinder running rich no matter what i do, So this is what needs to be done, need to sync'em and i will let you know how it goes. Tomorrow i am gonna do it. Thanks a lot again :), My bike has the same engine as Honda Rebel 250, difference is it has two carburetors, I manage to get it running but black plug on right cylinder was never fixed :D, :)) so here goes.
OK well remember to first check the common causes of fouling plugs, such as fuel height, float leakage, improper jets, valves needing adjusting, or oil infiltration. Also, if you have the same motor as the rebel, remember too that switching to a single carb setup is an option for you if you wanted to install rebel parts
mrmaxstorey Thanks a lot man, IT worked, Yes i am thinking of single carb setup as well... if i can't get these right i will definitely fix a single carb which is easier, less tuning more riding. :), But it worked that synching thingy. Now i have another problem, left carb float valve doesn't shut off. So gonna work on that tomorrow. Thanks a million, Many blessings.
To be honest I just sprayed them and wiped them down. But I'm about to break it apart again. The exhaust is straight pipe and stock intake. I did change the plug and one plug was lean white.
When you cleaned the carbs, did the slides move up and down smoothly? Any modifications to the air intake or exhaust? Have you checked for vacuum leaks?
Great video. I do have a question. On my 97 shadow " bobber" it start but won't idle off of the choke and at about 15 mph she falls on her face. I cleaned the carbs( didn't adjust)
I like this method because I can use an actual tool which has uniform thickness, rather than just "eyeballing" it. It doesnt take any longer and it gets it just a little bit more accurate
so i went with the pinesol method of cleaning my carbs. been soaking now for 3 days and looks great. now i gotta put everything back together and on! i had it synced a few months earlier but am wondering if i should perform this before getting them resynced or should i just get them resynced? i didnt take the carbs off linkages or mess with the adjustment screw so would i still have to get them resynced? im guessing yes. hoping not XD
Yeah but sometimes the butterfly valves stick when you close them all the way. Besides, you would still have to use the idle knob to open them back up again a little so the bike can idle. If you can get it done your way then go for it, its the same basic principle
Hi, I have an inline 4, do I adjust the carb that's controlled by the idle knob first and then set my other carbs to that? or do I synch the two carbs on each side first and then synch the left to the right? thanks
i cleaned the carbs like this and for the three carbs i could get open they seemed clean but i cleaned them anyway, the bike runs for 40 seconds to a minute then i have to stop at a stop sign and it gives up i can start it once more before i have to walk it back to the house. could it be the one carb i couldnt get open?
Hi, this was very well done! I just did this on my Suzuki gsx 250f and actually ended up adjusting the butterflies with the needle in there. I actually though the mixture screws were the means for adjusting the carbies as I made a home made manometer which was kind of pointless considering that i adjusted the wrong thing. how do you adjust mixture screws on a 4cylinder 2 carby bike? The guide I used to make my manometer is found by typing in youtube: ''suzuki across manometer''
For a rough bench sync you can use 4 ball bearings of the same size and drop them in the butterfly start to move the throttle until all the balls fall out at the same time. This is not a precision adjustment just a rough syncing gets you in the ball park
I just got done cleaning my carbs and put them back on and now my bike is very hard to start or wont start at all. When it is running when I use the throttle it back fires realy bad and doesnt want to run rigth. do you have any ideas what I can do to fix everything?
Thanks for doing this, I was, have been told, LOL..will no doubtedly be informed many times in the future that bench syncing achieves absolutely nothing. All that crap aside, I worked on a set of 4 1982 Honda Goldwing carbs in order to get the bike to run correctly..a long process indeed. The setup on a flat four engine has many more tubes, hoses etc than your basic inline set, way too complicated for its own good... a basic Honda bloodline trait. I followed another persons tutorial on bench syncing and with very careful work on my part the carbs worked really well, so well that people who knew the bike prior said.."oh I see you went ahead and got a shop to sync the carbs with the proper gauges afterall" In short, bench syncing DOES have value.
Is the valve supposed to be open like that? It's closed on mine and it opens after "I pull the throttle". I've got issues with cold starts - I always have to wait until the engine gets warm to be able to ride, otherwise it dies or it shoots to exhaust (when its a bit warm). I've cleared the carbs, added a little bit of air-flow as I though there is too much gasoline... so its better but not what it should be. The bike goes like super-pumped at one point and then its just choked. Any help would be appreciated :)
Have you got a video syncing a V-twin. Having trouble with my Suzuki vz800. Need to get it running smooth enough to get to the shop for a dynamic sync.
i tried this on my mikuni's from my xj550 and something just wasnt right, every time i adjusted 1 of the carbs it would change the potion of the previous one. none of them ever seemed to be in a relative similar postion.... any suggestions?
I totally forgot about the idle pin on my bike. I've just tried to sync my carbs on my fzr600r 1995 4jh and carb 3 is very low on my carbtool :/ so I saw this video again and thought ahhh need to use that idle pin also to sync carb 3 😋 the screw do not even touch the idle plate 😂
Hey Max. I have a Honda 79 CB650 and I put pod's on the crabs with open exhaust and wanted your opinion on the jets I should instal in the stock carbs. I watched your videos on cleaning carbs and that was great. my carbs are clean, now I need to rejet. Your input would be appreciated. Thanks man.
Using an actual sync tool would obviously be the most accurate but can you sync by sound and how well the engine is running? I don't think it would work for more than 2 cylinders but for something like this you're really just trying to match the 2nd body to the 1st.
Backfiring is usually a lean mixture, but it could also indicate misrouted ignition wires, or damaged/worn valves. Go to my channel and watch my video on how to fix a nonrunning motorcycle and let me know if you have questions after
Hi, just discovered your video. been having a problem synchronizing my carbs. I have an inline 4. the bike runs like crap. when I turn the adjustment screws. the needles on the vacum gauges don't move. I've turn the screws quite a bit and at some point I'll see blue smoke coming out of one of the exhaust pipes, but the gauge needles still doesn't move. would you happen to know the cause of this? also, if I follow your video will I at least be able to bring the carbs back to factory specs? thanks
Just curious if you have a video or advice on how to bench sync mechanical slide carbs?? Mine are Keihin PD50a style and the butterflies only seemed to be controlled by the choke, the slide itself is controlled by the throttle...any help appreciated!
I'm considering doing a bench sync because I've tried dynamic syncs but for some reason one carb always creates more vacuum then the other. Do you think this will help? My main reason for needing the carbs synced is because when the bike is warmed up it will idle very high sometimes (near 5000 rpm) but given enough time it will fall back down to a more reasonable level before going back up again.
+Brian Bailey Have you tried all the other repairs, like cleaning the carbs, setting float height, checking for vacuum leaks, checking compression, etc?
+mrmaxstorey I haven't gone as far as removing the carbs yet. But I was thinking cleaning them would be part of bench syncing them. That seems to be my next step so I'll try it. I've been resilient before now just because it looks pretty involved with all the small parts. Do you suggest that I try to clean the pilot jet or just leave it as is?
Mine had the same issue, ended up being the throttle shaft seals leaking. This might help you a bit if you are still struggling with it. xjbikes.com/forums/threads/in-the-church-of-clean.14692/ Mine was enough of a basket case it needed literally EVERYTHING done to the carbs.
Hi Max, I'm having problems to start a nonrunning GS400 1979. When doing the complete overhaul of the carbs, I removed the idle knob to get it clean. I forgot to take any references of the initial position of the butterfly. Can you tell me how I should adjust the knob as a starting point? Does this adjustment has a big impact on a nonrunning engine? And last question :) With the spark plug removed and the choke on, am I suppose to feel some fuel on my finger when I rotate the motor with the starter? Thanks for your videos and your help!
Dont worry about the idle knob too much, just screw it in until it impacts the linkage, and then about one full rotation after that. You can adjust it more later. And no you probably wont get much gas on your finger because you arent making very much compression with your finger there
I have 2 XJ650's. One is street legal and the other isn't. The XJ650 that's not street legal was to have had the carb professionally rebuilt. I couldn't get it running. I removed the number 1 spark plug and sprayed starter fluid in it. It fired right up but stalled right away. So I did it again and the same thing happened. So I removed the air cleaner and removed the spark plug and hit it with starter fluid. When the bike fired I kept spraying starter fluid in the air box it ran until I stopped it after 5 seconds. Sounded good but wouldn't take gas. Found out the so called professionally rebuilt carbs had this brown sticky crap in the fuel bowl area. The floats were frozen. Both engines are 5N8 and have the swear word YICS on the engine. What are the cylinder heads made of. Where the spark plugs are. The non registered bike has a spark plug that won't come out. It looks straight though. Today in York, Pa it was about 45 degrees out. I tried to start the bike that's street legal and all I got was a backfire. It didn't even try to start one bit. The petcock is working correctly. The battery is freshly charged. I am getting a fat blue spark. I changed the exhaust since I emailed you before. The previously owner of the legal bike had cherry bombs on the exhaust. I now have stock exhaust on the bike. It fits it like a glove. The gas was purchased less than 3 weeks ago. I am 45 and have NEVER had such a problem getting a bike to run right. I am getting float needles and seals soon. I am going to bench sync the carbs when they are off for the last time. This is the last gasp. I don't know what else to do. The bike wouldn't even fire with starter fluid. Compression is also good at 150, 145, 145, 145. I am at a loss.
Hi I'm trying to set up mine I can set the one side up.with the idle screw but when I try the other side and adjust the screw and nut the butterfly doesn't move any ideas would b a great help
Make sure that little adjusting nut is on the correct side of the linkage. Sometimes people will split the carbs when cleaning and then put it back together with the screw on the wrong side.
do the carbs have to be synced, if the carb body is removed as a whole without seperating each carb from one another? im rebuilding my trans on a 99 r1 and would like to take them off before flipping the engine...
+quickassilver11 Most ppl say to sync the carbs every time you remove them, but honestly if you dont mess with them then their settings won't change, and you'll probably be fine.
I'm really finding your videos to be an invaluable source of learning!
As a new home mechanic I'm in a brave new world. You explain everything so clearly and in a manner that even newbies like myself can understand.
You could make a fortune with all this knowledge your sharing Max, and I don't mean as a mechanic :)
Many thanks!
Cool glad to help
That's great man! Glad to have you join the at home shade tree crew lol. I've learned and done my own things as much as possible for the last 10 years. Always learning. Best way to learn is to dive in head first sometimes!
I had a real misfire and exhaust popping after a winter layup without draining the fuel. I needed to strip the carbs and clean the jets. As part of my diagnosis I tweaked the balance by ear and made things worse. So back to basics and try to set a datum balance was the next step. I found this video and did an interpretation using a small drill bit instead of the needle and a small piece of wood to lift the jets enough to measure. They were well out of synch and using this process worked amazingly well. After the rebuild the bike runs better than it has ever done in my 8 years of ownership. I have decided not to put in the garage for a professional balance because I don't expect much of an improvement. So thanks again for this video and I recommend it highly to anyone struggling with the same frustrations. Cheers, Tony
Glad to hear it Tony
Nice first step. I use a short length of copper wire (cos it’s soft) adjust down on to it so that it JUST holds, then tip the carbs up and unwind the adjuster letting the wire drop out. Same with the other carb(s). Hi from the uk.
I took my carbs off again and cleaned them. Now it works beter than ever. Thanks for the vids. They help me out a lot. Keep up the good work
Ive never even sat on a bike before. Bought a thundercat and it needed a carb cleaning. You saved me soo much mony and my cat runs way better. Thanks dude! subbed
Thanks so much for these videos, I happen to be working on my GS 450 L at the moment and now I have the confidence to tackle the carbs. Keep up the good work!!
Hey bud anyway i can get ahold of you I am also working on gs450l and need info
Really nice straight forward bench sync video , we did alot of dynamic synching in college but this video explains things quite simply for those who have little or no mechanical knowledge , very well done sir , keep up the good work
hey man i'm restoring a 1980 yamaha xs1100 and i don't know nothing about motorcycles (i don't even know how to ride one) and your videos have helped me really alot. many thanks from Juarez Mexico.
How did the restoration go?
Hello Sir, Thank you for the video. With your instruction and taking my time, I was able to sync my 1993 Yamaha XV Virago750 carburettors. Many thanks. Al
brilliant video, searched all over to find what screws to mess with and i finally found it. thanks!
Excellent video. I just needed to know how to get to the starting point after a rebuild and sync. Thank you.
I was looking for an easy and simple basic set up method for my 4 carbs on a Suzuki GSX 1100 F and here I found it. Thank you very much mrmaxstorey. I will try your set up method this afternoon and I hope it will work. Best regards from germany
Superb video. Nicely explained and done as it should. GJ
Thanks for making this video Max ! So many are afraid of malty carb set ups but I have learned that they are not as bad as I thought Working on my old KZ .
Thanks for helping to demystify motorcycle maintenance. Your videos are very helpful and I'm relieved to have found them. Keep up the good work!
Thanks max. Been looking for this post for a week now. My XV 535 balance is well out, can't start it at all. Now I can reset the carbs back to a 'factory setting' thanks to you. Now to trawl through you other vids. ;-)
Back in my glory days of working on my Yamaha xj700 maxim I had all the good tools. Motion pro carb sync, yics stick 25$ tool yamaha makes you buy so you can sync em. cheap temporary plastic gas tank to run bike without original tank installed, up sized jets as far as I could go. Being a great motorcyclist begins in the garage. Trial an error method will get your machine back on the road. I even had this special tool that was a spark plug that you could look inside cylinder see what color your fuel/air mix was burning at. 75$ .
As usual, another great vid that is easy for everyone to follow. I think you do a great job of making people understand that they can fix their own bikes and not be intimidated!
You'll probably be ok to just put them back on and back together so long as the adjustment linkage was not touched. The thing about bench syncing is it just puts it back to stock, which is fine, but what your bike really needs is for all the individual carbs to be adjusted to their individual cylinders, which have different needs as they wear independently. So go ahead and reassemble do a dynamic sync when you get a chance
I get called an "idle knob" quite often by mrs walker. Now I realise what it means :) enjoyed this so thanks.
dude you are the freaking man bro. I knew I screwed up somewhere on my carbs gonna go back and sinc em thanks
This method gets your carbs back to their baseline setting. its pretty close, but for optimal performance and smoothness, you should do a dynamic sync, using a manometer or the gauges
Thanks for the awesome videos sir,
You do a vary good job. I've done lots of work on my car but I'm starting work on my first bike and your videos have been a life saver.
You are so right ! Mine could be a little better but they are so close I thought I would stop . Before it was a dog but now it burns the rear tire off and at times makes you think you need a change of pants !
cleaned all jets & bench sync'ed floats & butterlflies my 1052 gsxr & it ran great
Amazing video brother:) thank you for sharing 👍
Thank you making this video! Help me tons in getting my 88 Hawk GT back on the rode!
Road!
Hi again and Greetings from India. I love your videos. I know of a better way to sync butterfly valves only on inline carbs with same side and positions. Pull out the idling screw so that the valves sit close completely. Hold the carbs against daylight and see through the intake side and press on the throttle to make sure both valves rise together.
Right on man, it really is surprising, in my opinion, how something as simple as a carburetor can do something so complex as making a bike go so fast
Great video, I will use this example to set my VFR400 NC30 back to default. Thanks :)
Muchas gracias por todo lo que me enseñó, señor Max Storey. Gracias
Good idea. I'm going to try this until I can afford vac gauges. I have triple Mikuni on my Triumph.
This is an amazing video it is exactly what i was looking for because i have a 87 gs450l and you are using just that for your prop. love it keep it up.
thanks for the quick response.I'll pull the carb sometime soon and see what I come up with.
Inside the mouth of most motorcycle carbs is a pin head marker. The butterfly is adjusted until half way over the marker point for correct adjustments. 🙂👍
Dude i needed this video! Thanks so much!
Ok so it idles off of choke now... I actually had to back out the idle screw it worked so well. Took it for a quick stroll and same result under a load . 15 mph and she falls flat, stumbles and lean pops... I wonder if it's bad gas.. The bike has been sitting for a while..
Thanks a lot man..... Really i think this is what i need to do for my Honda CD250U carburetors, I've been having a problem of right cylinder running rich no matter what i do, So this is what needs to be done, need to sync'em and i will let you know how it goes. Tomorrow i am gonna do it. Thanks a lot again :), My bike has the same engine as Honda Rebel 250, difference is it has two carburetors, I manage to get it running but black plug on right cylinder was never fixed :D, :)) so here goes.
OK well remember to first check the common causes of fouling plugs, such as fuel height, float leakage, improper jets, valves needing adjusting, or oil infiltration. Also, if you have the same motor as the rebel, remember too that switching to a single carb setup is an option for you if you wanted to install rebel parts
mrmaxstorey Thanks a lot man, IT worked, Yes i am thinking of single carb setup as well... if i can't get these right i will definitely fix a single carb which is easier, less tuning more riding. :), But it worked that synching thingy. Now i have another problem, left carb float valve doesn't shut off. So gonna work on that tomorrow. Thanks a million, Many blessings.
Hola
i adjust my butterflies so both completely close off their venturies and then i adjust idle as necessary when the bike is idling.
Rob Weaver hows that work for you? And inline 4s
so you do the complete opposite what this video actually says, i also didn't know that idle screw is throwing off whole carb sync
Nice and clear. Thanks for this video.
To be honest I just sprayed them and wiped them down. But I'm about to break it apart again. The exhaust is straight pipe and stock intake. I did change the plug and one plug was lean white.
Great info. Off to watch your other videos now :)
When you cleaned the carbs, did the slides move up and down smoothly? Any modifications to the air intake or exhaust? Have you checked for vacuum leaks?
Great video. I do have a question. On my 97 shadow " bobber" it start but won't idle off of the choke and at about 15 mph she falls on her face. I cleaned the carbs( didn't adjust)
Nicely done. Thanks a lot.
I like this method because I can use an actual tool which has uniform thickness, rather than just "eyeballing" it. It doesnt take any longer and it gets it just a little bit more accurate
Another great vid Max.many thanks
If I ever meet you I'm buying you a beer... Thanks bro
so i went with the pinesol method of cleaning my carbs. been soaking now for 3 days and looks great. now i gotta put everything back together and on! i had it synced a few months earlier but am wondering if i should perform this before getting them resynced or should i just get them resynced? i didnt take the carbs off linkages or mess with the adjustment screw so would i still have to get them resynced? im guessing yes. hoping not XD
Yeah but sometimes the butterfly valves stick when you close them all the way. Besides, you would still have to use the idle knob to open them back up again a little so the bike can idle. If you can get it done your way then go for it, its the same basic principle
Not often, they are expensive and hard to come by down here. But Id really like to get the opportunity again
Idle adjustment set too low?
Simple. Brilliant. Thank you!
I was thinking the same thing haha... Thanks bro.. Again good videos
Its the same process basically, just the carbs arent parallel so you need to change your point of view to make sure the butterfly valves are in line
Great video thanks. Trying it tomorrow.
Why not adjust the idle screw side second to match the other side, since it's way easier to adjust it?
No
Could you not adjust the idle carb to closed then adjust the synchronized carb to close eliminating the need to put anything in the chamber?
Wish I knew about this method sooner
Well the bike does need good gas to run. But I am very confident that you will also need to do a complete carb cleaning
2 mm feeler gauge ?
Hi, I have an inline 4, do I adjust the carb that's controlled by the idle knob first and then set my other carbs to that? or do I synch the two carbs on each side first and then synch the left to the right? thanks
i cleaned the carbs like this and for the three carbs i could get open they seemed clean but i cleaned them anyway, the bike runs for 40 seconds to a minute then i have to stop at a stop sign and it gives up i can start it once more before i have to walk it back to the house. could it be the one carb i couldnt get open?
Hi, this was very well done! I just did this on my Suzuki gsx 250f and actually ended up adjusting the butterflies with the needle in there. I actually though the mixture screws were the means for adjusting the carbies as I made a home made manometer which was kind of pointless considering that i adjusted the wrong thing. how do you adjust mixture screws on a 4cylinder 2 carby bike? The guide I used to make my manometer is found by typing in youtube: ''suzuki across manometer''
For a rough bench sync you can use 4 ball bearings of the same size and drop them in the butterfly start to move the throttle until all the balls fall out at the same time. This is not a precision adjustment just a rough syncing gets you in the ball park
AVI inc great idea. I have little airsoft ball bearings and they’re a bit greasy from handling with fingers, would it still be safe to drop them in?
Good info thanks
I just got done cleaning my carbs and put them back on and now my bike is very hard to start or wont start at all. When it is running when I use the throttle it back fires realy bad and doesnt want to run rigth. do you have any ideas what I can do to fix everything?
Thanks for doing this, I was, have been told, LOL..will no doubtedly be informed many times in the future that bench syncing achieves absolutely nothing.
All that crap aside, I worked on a set of 4 1982 Honda Goldwing carbs in order to get the bike to run correctly..a long process indeed.
The setup on a flat four engine has many more tubes, hoses etc than your basic inline set, way too complicated for its own good... a basic Honda bloodline trait.
I followed another persons tutorial on bench syncing and with very careful work on my part the carbs worked really well, so well that people who knew the bike prior said.."oh I see you went ahead and got a shop to sync the carbs with the proper gauges afterall"
In short, bench syncing DOES have value.
Is the valve supposed to be open like that? It's closed on mine and it opens after "I pull the throttle". I've got issues with cold starts - I always have to wait until the engine gets warm to be able to ride, otherwise it dies or it shoots to exhaust (when its a bit warm). I've cleared the carbs, added a little bit of air-flow as I though there is too much gasoline... so its better but not what it should be. The bike goes like super-pumped at one point and then its just choked. Any help would be appreciated :)
thanks man you really helped me a lot
Not really, I use a small size. Now that the butterfly valves are synchronized, they can be opened and closed in unison via the idle screw
Have you got a video syncing a V-twin. Having trouble with my Suzuki vz800. Need to get it running smooth enough to get to the shop for a dynamic sync.
Is there no replacement to spending the money to get a sync system? They're usually only used once or twice for us non-mechanics.
i tried this on my mikuni's from my xj550 and something just wasnt right, every time i adjusted 1 of the carbs it would change the potion of the previous one. none of them ever seemed to be in a relative similar postion.... any suggestions?
How does your idle have to be?
hey. hey max you would not happen to know why i have to hold my throttle slightly for my bike to idle would ya???
You can make one actually out of some long clear tubing, there are writeups how to do it here on youtube, but Ive never done it
Hey man, i have kawasaki gpz 500, can i use this sync method instead of that manometer one?
I totally forgot about the idle pin on my bike. I've just tried to sync my carbs on my fzr600r 1995 4jh and carb 3 is very low on my carbtool :/ so I saw this video again and thought ahhh need to use that idle pin also to sync carb 3 😋 the screw do not even touch the idle plate 😂
Are these cv 32 carbs
Hey Max. I have a Honda 79 CB650 and I put pod's on the crabs with open exhaust and wanted your opinion on the jets I should instal in the stock carbs. I watched your videos on cleaning carbs and that was great. my carbs are clean, now I need to rejet. Your input would be appreciated. Thanks man.
Ken Davis Check out my carb jetting video for the process on how to figure that out
How did you set the first carb? You turned something but didn’t show
twist the idle adjust knob
Using an actual sync tool would obviously be the most accurate but can you sync by sound and how well the engine is running? I don't think it would work for more than 2 cylinders but for something like this you're really just trying to match the 2nd body to the 1st.
+Dannyboy1277 A sync tool is just like $40
Backfiring is usually a lean mixture, but it could also indicate misrouted ignition wires, or damaged/worn valves. Go to my channel and watch my video on how to fix a nonrunning motorcycle and let me know if you have questions after
Adjust all of your carbs to the one controlled by the idle knob
Hi, just discovered your video. been having a problem synchronizing my carbs. I have an inline 4. the bike runs like crap. when I turn the adjustment screws. the needles on the vacum gauges don't move. I've turn the screws quite a bit and at some point I'll see blue smoke coming out of one of the exhaust pipes, but the gauge needles still doesn't move. would you happen to know the cause of this? also, if I follow your video will I at least be able to bring the carbs back to factory specs? thanks
You said once you adjust the carbs/ butterflys that you should have what done? I didn't understand what you said. Thanks
+Chuck Cunningham Whats the time stamp?
You should do a Dynamic Sync
Just curious if you have a video or advice on how to bench sync mechanical slide carbs?? Mine are Keihin PD50a style and the butterflies only seemed to be controlled by the choke, the slide itself is controlled by the throttle...any help appreciated!
***** Unfortunately I dont have a video up for that style carbs
Hi man. I have an old Honda and as well a couple of old BMW's; do you some times work on the German bikes?
Regards,
Alan
Alberta, Canada
Good job man .Thank you
I'm considering doing a bench sync because I've tried dynamic syncs but for some reason one carb always creates more vacuum then the other. Do you think this will help? My main reason for needing the carbs synced is because when the bike is warmed up it will idle very high sometimes (near 5000 rpm) but given enough time it will fall back down to a more reasonable level before going back up again.
+Brian Bailey Have you tried all the other repairs, like cleaning the carbs, setting float height, checking for vacuum leaks, checking compression, etc?
+mrmaxstorey I haven't gone as far as removing the carbs yet. But I was thinking cleaning them would be part of bench syncing them. That seems to be my next step so I'll try it. I've been resilient before now just because it looks pretty involved with all the small parts. Do you suggest that I try to clean the pilot jet or just leave it as is?
+Brian Bailey I suggest you clean the whole thing, including the pilot jets
Brian Bailey
Mine had the same issue, ended up being the throttle shaft seals leaking.
This might help you a bit if you are still struggling with it.
xjbikes.com/forums/threads/in-the-church-of-clean.14692/
Mine was enough of a basket case it needed literally EVERYTHING done to the carbs.
How close to a "complete" sync does this method get you?
Hi Max,
I'm having problems to start a nonrunning GS400 1979. When doing the complete overhaul of the carbs, I removed the idle knob to get it clean. I forgot to take any references of the initial position of the butterfly.
Can you tell me how I should adjust the knob as a starting point?
Does this adjustment has a big impact on a nonrunning engine?
And last question :)
With the spark plug removed and the choke on, am I suppose to feel some fuel on my finger when I rotate the motor with the starter?
Thanks for your videos and your help!
Dont worry about the idle knob too much, just screw it in until it impacts the linkage, and then about one full rotation after that. You can adjust it more later. And no you probably wont get much gas on your finger because you arent making very much compression with your finger there
mrmaxstorey Ok thanks!
By the way, your videos about troubleshooting are awesomes.
Vincent Pilon
Thanks Vincent
You are awesome and everyone thinks so
nice job, very informative
When doing that.do you have to turn the idle up or down before you test with pin
Down
I have 2 XJ650's. One is street legal and the other isn't. The XJ650 that's not street legal was to have had the carb professionally rebuilt. I couldn't get it running. I removed the number 1 spark plug and sprayed starter fluid in it. It fired right up but stalled right away. So I did it again and the same thing happened. So I removed the air cleaner and removed the spark plug and hit it with starter fluid. When the bike fired I kept spraying starter fluid in the air box it ran until I stopped it after 5 seconds. Sounded good but wouldn't take gas. Found out the so called professionally rebuilt carbs had this brown sticky crap in the fuel bowl area. The floats were frozen. Both engines are 5N8 and have the swear word YICS on the engine. What are the cylinder heads made of. Where the spark plugs are. The non registered bike has a spark plug that won't come out. It looks straight though. Today in York, Pa it was about 45 degrees out. I tried to start the bike that's street legal and all I got was a backfire. It didn't even try to start one bit. The petcock is working correctly. The battery is freshly charged. I am getting a fat blue spark. I changed the exhaust since I emailed you before. The previously owner of the legal bike had cherry bombs on the exhaust. I now have stock exhaust on the bike. It fits it like a glove. The gas was purchased less than 3 weeks ago. I am 45 and have NEVER had such a problem getting a bike to run right. I am getting float needles and seals soon. I am going to bench sync the carbs when they are off for the last time. This is the last gasp. I don't know what else to do. The bike wouldn't even fire with starter fluid. Compression is also good at 150, 145, 145, 145. I am at a loss.
What was the solution?
Hi I'm trying to set up mine I can set the one side up.with the idle screw but when I try the other side and adjust the screw and nut the butterfly doesn't move any ideas would b a great help
Make sure that little adjusting nut is on the correct side of the linkage. Sometimes people will split the carbs when cleaning and then put it back together with the screw on the wrong side.
do the carbs have to be synced, if the carb body is removed as a whole without seperating each carb from one another? im rebuilding my trans on a 99 r1 and would like to take them off before flipping the engine...
+quickassilver11 Most ppl say to sync the carbs every time you remove them, but honestly if you dont mess with them then their settings won't change, and you'll probably be fine.
A needle is tapered. Use a drill bit