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help diagnosing misfiring cylinder
- aenikolopov
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1) Cylinder #4 is not firing on many, maybe most, firing cycles
2) Exhaust head for #4 gets nowhere near as hot as the other heads
3) Pulling spark plug cable for #4 when the bike is running stalls the bike after about 5 seconds, but for other cylinders (#1 for example), stalls it after a second or so. This leads me to think that it is firing somewhat, but not always
4) The spark plug for #4 is foulded slightly wet black.
5) Switching the sparkplug cables for #1 and #4 does not fix the problem - #4 is still the one misfiring. Note that my spark plug cables are directly attached to the coil - emco junk.
6) Switching the sparkplugs between #1 and #4 does not fix the problem - #4 is still the one misfiring.
7) Spraying brake cleaner on the carb boots and the air box manifolds around #1 does not change idle, so no obvious air leak issue.
My head gasket is slightly leaky, as determined by leaking oil, but the bike ran for a season that way.
9) When I put one finger on the top of the sparkplug boot for #4 and another on the chassy, I get a bit of a shock, though not very hard. This persists on #4 after switching both sparkplug cable and sparkplug with #1
Any advice? Thoughts? Thanks
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- ayeckley
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1976 KZ900A4
1976 KZ900A4
1978 KZ1000A2
1983 ZX750 A1 aka GPz 750
1983 ZX750 A1
1973 CL350K4
1984 ZX1100 A2 aka GPz1100
1969 CT90
2006 Burgman 400
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- aenikolopov
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ayeckley wrote: You didn't mention what happens when you spray the carb boot of cylinder #4. Are you able to do a compression test of all four cylinders to see if #4 is significantly lower?
I held off on responding to this thread because it took me a bit to do a compression test. With regard to your first question - I mistyped, and head meant to say that nothing changed when I spray the carb boot of cylinder #4.
The compression test showed compression to be fine on #4. I don't totally trust the tester, and was having difficulty getting #3 above 90psi, but #4, the cylinder that is definitely misfiring, held 140psi, which seems great and is in line with what it was when I last checked it two years ago. So, where to go from here?
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- ayeckley
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Edit: or the carb synchronization for #4 could be off. The problem with that one is sorting out if a different vacuum level is the *cause* of the misfiring, or just a side effect of the misfiring. If it had previously run correctly and the adjustment hasn't been messed with then it's probably OK to disregard that as a possibility. I'm assuming these are not CV carbs.
1976 KZ900A4
1976 KZ900A4
1978 KZ1000A2
1983 ZX750 A1 aka GPz 750
1983 ZX750 A1
1973 CL350K4
1984 ZX1100 A2 aka GPz1100
1969 CT90
2006 Burgman 400
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- aenikolopov
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ayeckley wrote: Float levels all consistent using the clear tube method? Stock airbox?
It's a stock airbox, and you're right that they're not CV carbs, but you know what, you may have pointed me in the right direction. I didn't use this bike very much last season, and reviewing the notes from when I last worked on it, it seems that I played with the float levels on 4. I'm going to give it a check as soon as I can, and it'll be interesting to see if that's the issue. Haven't mucked with the sync at all, so I don't expect it to be that.
I appreciate that this is a bit academic, and the first thing to do is to just go check the float levels, but what should I expect to see there? The sparkplugs on #4 are fouled, so it's running too rich to fire, at least sometimes. I can understand the floats being set too low such that there's not enough fuel coming in, leaving the mixture lean. Is it possible that too-high floats would give a too-rich fuel mixture?
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- Z1Driver
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Is it possible that too-high floats would give a too-rich fuel mixture?
yes. And a plugged pilot circuit can also give you a rich condition. But the clear tube test would be in order first if you messed with the float level.
Blue 1975 Z1B
Red 2009 Concours 14
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- weeZee
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Then check for air leaks in the intake boot.
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- ayeckley
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Yes. The "head height" of the gas is too small, and more fuel is drawn out of the bowl than should be. Usually there are other symptoms as well, but you don't seem to be having them so it's not an air-tight diagnosis. Usually ( maybe I should say "sometimes") if the float levels are too high then there will be weeping of the gasketed joint between the float bowl and carb body, or even gas flowing out of the overflow port. There can be afterfiring as well (not to be confused with backfiring).aenikolopov wrote: Is it possible that too-high floats would give a too-rich fuel mixture?
1976 KZ900A4
1976 KZ900A4
1978 KZ1000A2
1983 ZX750 A1 aka GPz 750
1983 ZX750 A1
1973 CL350K4
1984 ZX1100 A2 aka GPz1100
1969 CT90
2006 Burgman 400
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- aenikolopov
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weeZee wrote: Try a fresh plug in #4? Check how the plug fires outside the engine on #4 (not near the plughole).
Then check for air leaks in the intake boot.
Thanks, I've done all that, hasn't lead me anywhere, unfortunately
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- aenikolopov
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ayeckley wrote:
Yes. The "head height" of the gas is too small, and more fuel is drawn out of the bowl than should be. Usually there are other symptoms as well, but you don't seem to be having them so it's not an air-tight diagnosis. Usually ( maybe I should say "sometimes") if the float levels are too high then there will be weeping of the gasketed joint between the float bowl and carb body, or even gas flowing out of the overflow port. There can be afterfiring as well (not to be confused with backfiring).aenikolopov wrote: Is it possible that too-high floats would give a too-rich fuel mixture?
So , I went ahead and checked the float levels on #4, and in fact the fuel was too low, and I corrected that, but was surprised when I turned on the bike that it hadn't made anything of a difference at all. There were a few specs of black crud in the bottom of the #4 bowls, I wonder whether that implies there might be something stuck in the jets, though the issue really seems to be happening at idle as well as at full speed, or I believe it is at least, so it would have to be pilot and main jet.
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- ayeckley
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Edit: I shouldn't say I'm out of ideas, just good ones. Everything else I've got becomes a science experiment that you probably don't want to launch into. At some point the easiest thing is just to try a different set of carburetors and see if the issues persist.
1976 KZ900A4
1976 KZ900A4
1978 KZ1000A2
1983 ZX750 A1 aka GPz 750
1983 ZX750 A1
1973 CL350K4
1984 ZX1100 A2 aka GPz1100
1969 CT90
2006 Burgman 400
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- aenikolopov
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ayeckley wrote: What was happening was that the leaking valve(s) would mimic a higher fuel level than would actually occur when the engine was running.
I took a look, the main thing I noticed is that when the engine is running, the fuel level drops about an extra 5mm, using the clear tube. That seems to be normal though (?), because that happens on both #1 and #4, but only #4 is misfiring Any if I'm right about that being typical?
Also, I noticed again, that I am easily shocked when I ground myself with one hand and touch #4 at the bottom of the boot, right by the engine. Now maybe that's not terribly surprising, but it doesn't happen on any of the other plugs/wires. As I stated before though, I've swapped both the plugs and the wires on this cylinder before (with cylinder #1) , to no avail.
I should add - adjusting the air screw all the way in and all the way out has no effect. reset it to where it was when I started.
Ayeckley, I'm happy to hear about any experiments you have brewing in your head, because I'm not sure where else to go, other than tearing out carb #4 for a cleaning.
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