I took a gasket sealer cap, took a common bit that fit the carb
adjusting
screw, cut the shank portion of the bit in half and glued it into the
cap.
It's tight, but it works. I just won't do it while it's hot due to
the
close exhaust header pipe. Takes longer, but it gets it done.
GregM
> To adjust your mixture I'd put it at 1 1/4 turns out to start.
Then with
> the bike hot (10 mile ride) turn the screw out till the idle gets
rough.
> Then turn in until the idle gets rough. The turn it back 1/2 way
I have it 1 1/2 turns out right now. How am I suppose to adjust this
with
the carb on the bike? I bought a very low profile "screwdriver"
to make the adjustment. It is actually just a thumbwheel with a
small
screwdriver bit in it. I was not suprised that it did not fit but I
was
suprised that the bit, by itself, still would not fit! How has
everyone
adjusted there idle mixture? I guess I could tilt the carb
temporarily to
reach it but it would be better if there is a way to adjust in
position.
-----Original Message-----
From:
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com [mailto:
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com]
On
Behalf Of flowridej
Sent: Tuesday, May 08, 2007 12:58 PM
To:
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [DSN_KLR650] Re: proper jetting for above 4000 feet
> I think yesterday Bill Watson answered your question. But I was
going
> through about 300 e-mails from the weekend so I might be wrong. Do
you
> need more input?
I don't think I heard from Bill but got input for a couple other
people. I
also talked to a couple local dealers Saturday when I had the bike
apart.
The consensus seems to be that the Kawasaki low altitude jetting
works quite
well here at altitude so I have left it alone for now.
> Mine would be leave the jets alone and install a No Toil Filter and
use
> No Toil filter maintenance products. I think you'd be real close
to
> perfect (for a KLR) with that combination at altitude.
I am not really familiar with there stuff. I have a K&N in my other
bike.
I have seen a few people say the K&N setup is not very good for the
KLR and
have never read anything bad about the No Toil so I will have to take
a look
at it soon.
> I think the stock exhaust works well on the KLR and you can better
spend
> money on suspension or brake upgrades if you really think you need
them.
> I also like the quiet exhaust systems cause more noise doesn't
equal more
> power in many cases. And more noise does influence more people in
a
> negative manner about all motorcycles.
Yeah, I really agree with that one. I looked at a nice, very well
setup KLR
a couple weeks ago. The big thing I did not like about it was that
it had a
SuperTrapp on it and it was REALLY loud. I am glad that I got one
with the
stock pipe still on it.
> To adjust your mixture I'd put it at 1 1/4 turns out to start.
Then with
> the bike hot (10 mile ride) turn the screw out till the idle gets
rough.
> Then turn in until the idle gets rough. The turn it back 1/2 way
I have it 1 1/2 turns out right now. How am I suppose to adjust this
with
the carb on the bike? I bought a very low profile "screwdriver"
to make the adjustment. It is actually just a thumbwheel with a
small
screwdriver bit in it. I was not suprised that it did not fit but I
was
suprised that the bit, by itself, still would not fit! How has
everyone
adjusted there idle mixture? I guess I could tilt the carb
temporarily to
reach it but it would be better if there is a way to adjust in
position.
> Most folks that try to get more performance out of the KLR spend
lots of
> money and don't get much return for it. I'm thinking if you want
to race
> it you have the wrong bike. : ) But for getting you from point A
I read enough before I got it to know that there is not much more
performance to be had. That is OK, I think it will still be a good
bike
anyway. I just want it to run properly so I don't lose any of the
potential
performance that is there. It is suprising that Kawasaki could be so
far
off in their jetting recommendations. I trust the real world
experience of
the group here over the factory guidelines any day! Thanks Jeff and
everyone for all the feedback.
Jason
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