ELP_JC
Well-known member
Okay gang. First of all, a question for the highly technical folks:
Why the heck does Yamaha allow the air screws to be messed with, but not the TB plates??? All my FI bikes have been the opposite: air screws sealed, but we could mess with the throttle plates.
Now back to the 'weird' FJR < he he>.
When I open up my bike for the synch, I want to finish the job right there, so I'm anticipating to the potential need to mess with the plates. And have a few questions before jumping straight to the plate subject.
How far on the rpm range do air screws affect the synch? In other words, above what rpms do we need to synch with the plate screws and not the air screws?
Let's go to the subject now, and am going to do it in the form of questions:
- What threshold are we looking at to decide if we need to synch the TB plates or not? The same 10mmHg as the air screws? Less? More? State what you think.
- Which is the 'base' TB on the FJR? Unlike air screws, there HAS to be one base TB. My guess is #3, just because it's the 'base' recommended for the vacuum check. And what should be done about the blue paint? Redo it, or remove it from all 4 screws? Anything better than broken paint, no? I already removed all visible blue paint from my bike; probably a pound.
-What's the best rpm to synch for the TB plates? 3K? 3.5K? 4K? The higher the rpm, the hotter the engine, which is a problem now for me, with 80º+ lows and triple digit highs, even with a fan... which I don't have.
- This is more like a statement: If we synch the TB plates, we NEED to go back to the air screws, especially if #3 was adjusted, so all TBs are at 250mmHg at idle; this IS a spec we're sure of.
Now the question: Should we check the TB plate synch back again? Just curious.
Finally, I read a ridiculous procedure (no offense to the writer) that had my head spinning before even finishing it. This stuff is not even covered in the service manual, so don't know where it came from. Anyway, I've done tons of synch jobs on my previous bikes, and it simply was a matter of adjusting the 3 adjustable TBs against the fixed one, and you were done. Yes, you had to fiddle a bit with the screws, as sometimes one affects the other, but most of us figure that out in minutes, and end up synching our machines way better than spec.
Or is there anything that makes this bike different than the others?? If so, please explain.
Again, I don't plan to fiddle with this unless I think the synch is bad enough at high rpms that warrants adjustment. On the other hand, it's not a big deal. Or it shouldn't be. Let's see what transpires from this thread. And it'd be great if it could be incorporated to the 'bin of facts' where other folks have access to it.
So have at it gentlemen. Let the controversy begin :yahoo: .
JC
Why the heck does Yamaha allow the air screws to be messed with, but not the TB plates??? All my FI bikes have been the opposite: air screws sealed, but we could mess with the throttle plates.
Now back to the 'weird' FJR < he he>.
When I open up my bike for the synch, I want to finish the job right there, so I'm anticipating to the potential need to mess with the plates. And have a few questions before jumping straight to the plate subject.
How far on the rpm range do air screws affect the synch? In other words, above what rpms do we need to synch with the plate screws and not the air screws?
Let's go to the subject now, and am going to do it in the form of questions:
- What threshold are we looking at to decide if we need to synch the TB plates or not? The same 10mmHg as the air screws? Less? More? State what you think.
- Which is the 'base' TB on the FJR? Unlike air screws, there HAS to be one base TB. My guess is #3, just because it's the 'base' recommended for the vacuum check. And what should be done about the blue paint? Redo it, or remove it from all 4 screws? Anything better than broken paint, no? I already removed all visible blue paint from my bike; probably a pound.
-What's the best rpm to synch for the TB plates? 3K? 3.5K? 4K? The higher the rpm, the hotter the engine, which is a problem now for me, with 80º+ lows and triple digit highs, even with a fan... which I don't have.
- This is more like a statement: If we synch the TB plates, we NEED to go back to the air screws, especially if #3 was adjusted, so all TBs are at 250mmHg at idle; this IS a spec we're sure of.
Now the question: Should we check the TB plate synch back again? Just curious.
Finally, I read a ridiculous procedure (no offense to the writer) that had my head spinning before even finishing it. This stuff is not even covered in the service manual, so don't know where it came from. Anyway, I've done tons of synch jobs on my previous bikes, and it simply was a matter of adjusting the 3 adjustable TBs against the fixed one, and you were done. Yes, you had to fiddle a bit with the screws, as sometimes one affects the other, but most of us figure that out in minutes, and end up synching our machines way better than spec.
Or is there anything that makes this bike different than the others?? If so, please explain.
Again, I don't plan to fiddle with this unless I think the synch is bad enough at high rpms that warrants adjustment. On the other hand, it's not a big deal. Or it shouldn't be. Let's see what transpires from this thread. And it'd be great if it could be incorporated to the 'bin of facts' where other folks have access to it.
So have at it gentlemen. Let the controversy begin :yahoo: .
JC
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