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Not an FJ, but some info might be relevant

Started by JPaganel, April 16, 2015, 08:06:23 PM

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JPaganel

So, a friend of mine had this bike for years, never got it running, and then finally got a working one. His wife asked for garage floorspace back.

I rescued him from this bike and this bike from him. It's a 1977 Suzuki GS400.

The airbox was missing parts and the filter, and many metal bits were rusty. So I yanked it. In doing so I discovered that the rubbers attaching carbs to box have these airhorns sticking into the box. Velocity stacks. The airbox is very primitive, aside from that. A square thing of thin plastic.

I cleaned carbs and put the stacks on, but kept the box off. It actually runs pretty well. The carbs are Mikuni CV, don't know what series, but not that different in principle  from the ones FJ uses.

So, might it be that just a length of tubing between pod and carb is the solution to pods without rejetting?

This is a video of it running after carb clean. Sounds fine to me.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-GyoJOn0-JU
1993 FJ1200 ABS

1984 FJ600, up on blocks

1986 FJ1200, flaming wreck, repaired and sold
1986 FJ1200, repaired, ridden, sold


I don't want a pickle
I just want to ride my motorcicle

FJmonkey

The glass is not half full, it was engineered with a 2X safety factor.

'86 Ambulance - Bent frame, cracked case, due for an overhaul
'89 Stormy Blue - Suits my Dark Side

gumby302ho

Quote from: JPaganel on April 16, 2015, 08:06:23 PM
So, a friend of mine had this bike for years, never got it running, and then finally got a working one. His wife asked for garage floorspace back.

I rescued him from this bike and this bike from him. It's a 1977 Suzuki GS400.

The airbox was missing parts and the filter, and many metal bits were rusty. So I yanked it. In doing so I discovered that the rubbers attaching carbs to box have these airhorns sticking into the box. Velocity stacks. The airbox is very primitive, aside from that. A square thing of thin plastic.

I cleaned carbs and put the stacks on, but kept the box off. It actually runs pretty well. The carbs are Mikuni CV, don't know what series, but not that different in principle  from the ones FJ uses.

So, might it be that just a length of tubing between pod and carb is the solution to pods without rejetting?

This is a video of it running after carb clean. Sounds fine to me.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-GyoJOn0-JU

Not really a Suzuki fan but I do believe they make some really serious strong running very tough engines, one day I feel some sort of Suzuki will be knocking at my door, most likely a GS! Love seeing the oldies fire up and run! Good work, Cheers

JPaganel

Quote from: gumby302ho on April 21, 2015, 05:30:20 PM
Not really a Suzuki fan but I do believe they make some really serious strong running very tough engines, one day I feel some sort of Suzuki will be knocking at my door, most likely a GS! Love seeing the oldies fire up and run! Good work, Cheers

I'm a Yamaha fan first and foremost.

The Suzuki, compared to a Yamaha of the same era (my wife has my old 79 XS400) is so much more cheaply built, it's kind of funny. Still, the engine is a sturdy twin, and with a little more cleanup this old girl will go a few more years.

I need to whip up a battery box, an air filtration setup of some kind, and get new forks and mufflers. Mufflers are rusted to hell and fork tubes are pitted.
1993 FJ1200 ABS

1984 FJ600, up on blocks

1986 FJ1200, flaming wreck, repaired and sold
1986 FJ1200, repaired, ridden, sold


I don't want a pickle
I just want to ride my motorcicle

JPaganel

So, I welded up a battery box and rigged intakes from plumbing fittings and tubes.

Here's what happened: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FyePeCacIhY
1993 FJ1200 ABS

1984 FJ600, up on blocks

1986 FJ1200, flaming wreck, repaired and sold
1986 FJ1200, repaired, ridden, sold


I don't want a pickle
I just want to ride my motorcicle