Exhaust help required
- Ditchfinder
- Posts: 1123
- Joined: Thu Dec 24, 2020 8:55 am
- Has thanked: 621 times
- Been thanked: 692 times
Exhaust help required
So I swapped the end cans on my 94 Sprint to some oval laser cans cos well they looked nicer and stuff (never mind that the bike's a total shit heap, it's a project don't ya know! ) Anyway it was running fine before but now is misfiring and has lost a lot of power.
I thought end can swaps shouldn't make a huge difference to fuelling but was I wrong to assume this?
I thought end can swaps shouldn't make a huge difference to fuelling but was I wrong to assume this?
'07 Griso 1100 (for sale), '94 Sprint 900, the scabbiest Himalayan in the country
-
- Posts: 11234
- Joined: Mon Mar 16, 2020 6:40 pm
- Location: The road of many manky motorcycles
- Has thanked: 607 times
- Been thanked: 4124 times
Re: Exhaust help required
It's probably running lean due to less restrictive cans, go up two sizes on the main jets and work from there, you'll enjoy getting the carbs off and putting them back on again, especially the number of times you're going to be doing it.
I don't know of anyone that tunes Triumphs, but you could try Larry at PDQ Developments, he seems to have experience of most bikes.
I don't know of anyone that tunes Triumphs, but you could try Larry at PDQ Developments, he seems to have experience of most bikes.
Honda Owner
- Ditchfinder
- Posts: 1123
- Joined: Thu Dec 24, 2020 8:55 am
- Has thanked: 621 times
- Been thanked: 692 times
Re: Exhaust help required
Is it worth pulling the plugs to check before taking carbs off - they are a bit of a sod on these Hinkley Triumphs ?
'07 Griso 1100 (for sale), '94 Sprint 900, the scabbiest Himalayan in the country
-
- Posts: 11234
- Joined: Mon Mar 16, 2020 6:40 pm
- Location: The road of many manky motorcycles
- Has thanked: 607 times
- Been thanked: 4124 times
Re: Exhaust help required
If you want, but it's going to be running lean if the only thing you've changed is the cans, and looking at the plugs to tell you something you already know seems a bit pointless.Ditchfinder wrote: ↑Tue May 04, 2021 1:23 pm Is it worth pulling the plugs to check before taking carbs off - they are a bit of a sod on these Hinkley Triumphs ?
And yes I'm aware the carbs are a bastard to get off and on.
Honda Owner
- Ditchfinder
- Posts: 1123
- Joined: Thu Dec 24, 2020 8:55 am
- Has thanked: 621 times
- Been thanked: 692 times
Re: Exhaust help required
Ah deep joy **wanders off to youtube to learn about main jets before realising it's probably best to give it to a man to sort out
'07 Griso 1100 (for sale), '94 Sprint 900, the scabbiest Himalayan in the country
-
- Posts: 11234
- Joined: Mon Mar 16, 2020 6:40 pm
- Location: The road of many manky motorcycles
- Has thanked: 607 times
- Been thanked: 4124 times
Re: Exhaust help required
It's pretty easy to change the main jets once you've got the carbs out - getting the carbs out is hard work.
If it's got Japanese carbs buy a set of JIS screwdrivers
If it's got Japanese carbs buy a set of JIS screwdrivers
Honda Owner
- mangocrazy
- Posts: 6901
- Joined: Tue Dec 22, 2020 9:58 pm
- Has thanked: 2405 times
- Been thanked: 3630 times
Re: Exhaust help required
The shiny new can you've put on isn't a stubby (or significantly shorter than the original), is it? Stubby cans have a well-deserved reputation for fucking up the fuelling.
There is no cloud, just somebody else's computer.
- Ditchfinder
- Posts: 1123
- Joined: Thu Dec 24, 2020 8:55 am
- Has thanked: 621 times
- Been thanked: 692 times
Re: Exhaust help required
No the cans aren't shorter - been doing some more research following cheese's advice and it does look like the cans I have are a lot less restrictive so will need to rejet the carbs
'07 Griso 1100 (for sale), '94 Sprint 900, the scabbiest Himalayan in the country
-
- Posts: 81
- Joined: Wed Oct 14, 2020 12:36 pm
- Location: Llanidloes, Powys.
- Has thanked: 30 times
- Been thanked: 37 times
Re: Exhaust help required
remember the plugs will only give you an idea of how the bike was running - when it was shut off.
To get an rough idea of jetting on a race bike. we had to run it on full throttle down a straight at the end of a session (to judge the main jet fuelling) and kill the engine instantly and push back to the pits.
It would benefit from a run on a dyno. you'll never jet a bike off road riding.
Money well spent
To get an rough idea of jetting on a race bike. we had to run it on full throttle down a straight at the end of a session (to judge the main jet fuelling) and kill the engine instantly and push back to the pits.
It would benefit from a run on a dyno. you'll never jet a bike off road riding.
Money well spent
-
- Posts: 537
- Joined: Sun Mar 15, 2020 7:41 am
- Location: Oxfordshire
- Has thanked: 705 times
- Been thanked: 701 times
Re: Exhaust help required
Before you go delving into the carbs is it worth putting the old cans back on just to make sure you haven’t, coincidentally, picked up another problem? Would be a huge pain to pull the carbs and then find out it needed a new spark plug ...
- Ditchfinder
- Posts: 1123
- Joined: Thu Dec 24, 2020 8:55 am
- Has thanked: 621 times
- Been thanked: 692 times
Re: Exhaust help required
Going to give the headers a thorough check to see if I cracked anything getting the old cans off or didn't fit the link pipes properly, if I can't see anything obvious the old cans are going back on to check whether the new cans are to blame for the poor running
'07 Griso 1100 (for sale), '94 Sprint 900, the scabbiest Himalayan in the country
- Ditchfinder
- Posts: 1123
- Joined: Thu Dec 24, 2020 8:55 am
- Has thanked: 621 times
- Been thanked: 692 times
Re: Exhaust help required
It's a weekend job bevvo - I'd find yourself some cream to soothe yer chafes
'07 Griso 1100 (for sale), '94 Sprint 900, the scabbiest Himalayan in the country
- Ditchfinder
- Posts: 1123
- Joined: Thu Dec 24, 2020 8:55 am
- Has thanked: 621 times
- Been thanked: 692 times
Re: Exhaust help required
So old exhausts back on and it's not back to how it was. Below 4k rpm it's running rough, above 4k on part throttle it's s still rough, above 4k on open throttle it runs fine.
What could I have spannered changing the cans over do you think?
What could I have spannered changing the cans over do you think?
'07 Griso 1100 (for sale), '94 Sprint 900, the scabbiest Himalayan in the country
-
- Posts: 3028
- Joined: Mon Mar 16, 2020 9:30 pm
- Location: Less that 50 miles away from Moscow, but which one?
- Has thanked: 1346 times
- Been thanked: 1722 times
Re: Exhaust help required
I've not read the wbole thread but could there just be some crap in the fuel and its pulled that through?Ditchfinder wrote: ↑Sun May 09, 2021 1:08 pm So old exhausts back on and it's not back to how it was. Below 4k rpm it's running rough, above 4k on part throttle it's s still rough, above 4k on open throttle it runs fine.
What could I have spannered changing the cans over do you think?
- Ditchfinder
- Posts: 1123
- Joined: Thu Dec 24, 2020 8:55 am
- Has thanked: 621 times
- Been thanked: 692 times
Re: Exhaust help required
Ok after a tip to check the vaccuum feed to the fuel tap I have discovered there's a non standard line with a fuel filter in it, likely put in to stop crap from the tank blocking the carbs but I'm wondering if this is causing an issue. It wasn't before though so not sure why it would now
'07 Griso 1100 (for sale), '94 Sprint 900, the scabbiest Himalayan in the country
- Taipan
- Posts: 13948
- Joined: Sat Mar 14, 2020 1:48 pm
- Location: Essex Riviera!
- Has thanked: 15955 times
- Been thanked: 10248 times
Re: Exhaust help required
When is it misfiring? Is it spluttering as you crack teh throttle open? Try shimming the needles first
- Ditchfinder
- Posts: 1123
- Joined: Thu Dec 24, 2020 8:55 am
- Has thanked: 621 times
- Been thanked: 692 times
Re: Exhaust help required
Nope misfire goes away if I whack throttle open above 4k, anything on half throttle or below 4k and it's no good.
Need to check vacuum pipe off fuel tap next as these get easily pinched due to routing then it's probably off with the online fuel filter then check resistance across coils after that.
Need to check vacuum pipe off fuel tap next as these get easily pinched due to routing then it's probably off with the online fuel filter then check resistance across coils after that.
'07 Griso 1100 (for sale), '94 Sprint 900, the scabbiest Himalayan in the country
-
- Posts: 537
- Joined: Sun Mar 15, 2020 7:41 am
- Location: Oxfordshire
- Has thanked: 705 times
- Been thanked: 701 times
Re: Exhaust help required
I think I’d start with the simple stuff first; plugs, leads, fresh fuel filter etc. These types of faults can be misleading - what seems fuel related can be ignition and vice versa and once the engine is spinning fast enough (I.e. over 4K) it can overcome a poor spark etc
- Ditchfinder
- Posts: 1123
- Joined: Thu Dec 24, 2020 8:55 am
- Has thanked: 621 times
- Been thanked: 692 times
Re: Exhaust help required
Will do, I'm thinking fuel side though as all I've done is swap cans and put fuel in it and it was fine before
'07 Griso 1100 (for sale), '94 Sprint 900, the scabbiest Himalayan in the country