chris


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Hough Racing wrote:i looked and did not see an electrical reserve switch however i did see one unaccounted for black wire. i will research the harness today, thanks everyone, i will post if i get it running rite.
chris
thanks for your input. i set the crank to tdc with a pencil and it was on the mark i have been using, however when i pulled the valve cover the cams were 180 out. could that be the problem? when i set them i never checked which was the key stroke.brittus wrote:I have owned (7) 87/88's 1000's and now have a 1990 I got cheap which is in "fix up" mode right now...
Wow, no valve shims. Makes the previous owner suspect, eh? I would guess you got the cam timing right when you put the pads in.
As far as the reserve system is mentioned I've never heard of "limp mode" and certainly mine never changed performance regardless of the amount of fuel in the tank.
Easy check first: Since the Digital Ignitor (as Yamaha so proudly printed on the label) has only the one pickup to determine crank position you might have the cams timed correctly on the top end/sprockets but it might be off at the crank, making the adavnce off or confusing the Ignitor. If you look at the factory manual you will see the sharp jump in spark advance- I would make sure the crank was set to the TDC mark and not the Firing mark when you reinstalled the shims... retarded timing makes engines start easily and run at low revs but not at higher RPMs. If you are not sure of marks a piece of wood (chopstick/pencil) inserted in the #1 plug hole while turning the engine slowly would allow you to create a cheap, easy "TDC tool" to make sure you are looking at the right mark through the timing hole- when the dowel starts to drop you have passed TDC. In the Bad Old Days that is how you had to set TDC on Triumphs, Nortons etc. - there was no crank position hole at that time.
Sounds more like fueling than anything else. I'd guess needle jets in some outrageous clip position or main jets way off- bigger is not always better and as long as the motor is running fine at low revs I'd say the cam/buckets are OK.
Brittus
Your cams aren't 180° out...your crank is 360° out. (haha..I crack myself up)Hough Racing wrote:thanks for your input. i set the crank to tdc with a pencil and it was on the mark i have been using, however when i pulled the valve cover the cams were 180 out. could that be the problem? when i set them i never checked which was the key stroke.
i have a timing light but how do i know if it has advance mode. i do not see how a timing advance key can be added to the crank, where would that be? the mark i am using on the crank is just below the T on the crank veiw hole.reelrazor wrote:Your cams aren't 180° out...your crank is 360° out. (haha..I crack myself up)Hough Racing wrote:thanks for your input. i set the crank to tdc with a pencil and it was on the mark i have been using, however when i pulled the valve cover the cams were 180 out. could that be the problem? when i set them i never checked which was the key stroke.
but, it shouldn't matter as we have a 'waste spark' ignition. #s 1 and 4 fire simultaneaously, as do #s 2 and 3-which means each one of each pair is 360° from the other.
I think brittus is on track here, maybe you timed the cams with the wrong flywheel indicator..that would put you 10° or more off.
And if the bike has an 'advance kit' using an offset flywheel key....THAT must be removed and replaced with a straight flywheel key to properly time the cams.
If yo get a timimg light with advance mode, you can quickly double check the timing and move on if necessary.