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to drain or not ot drain ?
- phil
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- RonKZ650
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phil wrote:
hi guys. great new site. i am getting ready to winterize my bike withing the next month and i usually put fuel stablilzer in my bike and run it for about 10 minutes and then remove my tank and bring it into the house along with the rest of the painted parts. my question is should i drain my carb bowls or let them be with the fuel and stabilizer mixture in them? the bike will be sitting in the shed for the winter which here in canada usually lasts 4-5. any info would be great
321,000 miles on KZ's that I can remember. Not going to see any more.
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- dannyg40
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Definitly drain ! (or run dry) I have had 2 boats with 40 horse outboards that I always ran stabil in. My second boat had a 27 gallon gas tank built in. Everytime I pulled the boat out of the water, I disconnected the fuel line till the carbs ran out and the motor died on its own. The lake I used the boat on was pretty small, so it took me almost 2 years to run the 27 gallon tank to empty.( I didnt have much time to be fishing)The fuel never gummed up in the tank, and when I would hook up the fuel line and let the carbs fill back up, the motor started right away and ran perfect. I do the same thing with my 30 year old snowblower in the garage. I run the carbs dry after I plow snow, and right now it has a half tank of gas from last February in it. I can go open the petcock right now, and it will start and run perfect on the 2nd pull.
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- luvmykaw
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- JR
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I'll be taking my carbs off and bringing them inside when I put the bike away. As luvmykaw says - its a good time to clean them up. I usually add stabiliser to the gastank and fill it right to the very brim and plug the fuel line with a bolt. I'm not sure if it does anything but at least it doesnt do any harm. I usually change the oil and filter also. Bike goes in a garden shed along with the lawn mower to which I never do anything, not even stabil in the gas tank.
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Woodstock, Ontario, Canada
1980 kz750 E1, 4 into 1, K&N pods.
1980 kz750E1, Delkevic exhaust
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- wiredgeorge
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As far as the carburetors go, draining isn't enough in my opinion... I would drain, then remove the airbox or pods or whatever and blow air into:
1 FUEL INLET (s)
2 Vents
3 Holes on intake edge of carb venturi (these connect to main jet and pilot jet
4. choke hole in venturi which is not on edge or venturi but inset about 3/4"
Blow the carbs out with float bowls off. You will be surprised at how much gas comes out the pilot and main jets. Then put the bowls back on and take some packing tape and cover the inlets on the carbs so that mice / bugs don't find a home. Close up the airbox...
I would also spray all aluminum with WD40
wiredgeorge Motorcycle Carburetors
Mico TX
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- fixer5000
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1978 kz650b pretty much stock
\\\\\\\" get there fast but arrive alive \\\\\\\"
massachusetts
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- baldy110
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- Bud1
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- wiredgeorge
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wiredgeorge Motorcycle Carburetors
Mico TX
www.wgcarbs.com
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- RonKZ650
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wiredgeorge wrote:
Bud, the reason that the carburetors gummed up is that there should have been NO gas in them... they were full when you parked the vehicle. Then you added the Stabil. How do you expect the Stabil got down into the carburetors? They were already full! Next time, turn the gas off and remove the hose going to your carburetor and drain the carburetors. If you follow my advice and blow them out with compressed air, I guarantee they will not be gummed up! The Stabil allows you to keep gas in the tank and it won't pick up moisture which causes rust. Drain the tank filled with Stabil and put in fresh gas, reconnect the gas hose and you will be right back in business.
321,000 miles on KZ's that I can remember. Not going to see any more.
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- loudhvx
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Blowing compressed air into a fully assembled carb through the fuel inlet is a bad general practice. It can bend the tang on the float. This will increase the fuel level in the carb.
Fuel pressure is around .5psi on the needle valve.
1981 KZ550 D1 gpz.
Kz550 valve train warning.
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