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By Wardy1985
#1963
Afternoon,

When out on my 53 bullet it is coughing and spluttering when i take off the choke. It losing some power and seems to be sluggish, the only way i can run it properly is to leave the choke on full. Any ideas what i can do to remedy this??

HELP!!!
By Gwilly
#23578
General maintenance after the winter layoff...

Check battery water level and put on charge.

Clean, adjust or replace spark plug after been running rich.

Strip and clean carb float bowl, pilot and main jet/air and fuelways...

Dont mess with settings just yet..

Run some fuel into a glass jar, check for water.. Is fuel fresh??

Refit the charged battery and try for a decent spark at plug.
If alls well should fire up... if not we go to coil/points/condensor/magneto/ whatever you got.

Just the basics for now, cheers gwilly

By Riggers
#23579
Sounds like it's running weak to me. Was it running ok up to now or has something changed? Has the bike been in hibernation for winter. Give us more to go on mate....Cheers. Riggers.
By Alan R
#23587
Hi guys-------- is that a 1953 bike or a modern "53" plate ie a 2003 bike ??---If it's the 2003 bike you can drain the float-bowl into a container by removing the big screw at the bottom of the float-bowl..You will soon tell if there are globules of water rolling around in the bottom, underneath the layer of petrol...If this has been a winter lay-up and in a cold garage with, say half a tank of fuel in then chances are it's the E5 fuel "layering out" with the moisture sinking to the bottom...I've extracted this from the link given later on}------------------------ 1) Water accumulation in the fuel tank - ethanol absorbs water from the air. The water condenses in the fuel tank and will pull the ethanol out of suspension with the petrol. This is bad news because it strips the octane out of the petrol, leaving you with a layer of octane-poor fuel on top and a water-ethanol layer mixture on the bottom. If this gets sucked into the combustion chamber, you will have poor starting and very rough running with potentially engine damage.

2) Deposit is like to build up - Ethanol when mixed with water readily forms Gums in the fuel system much quicker than fuel without Ethanol. These Gums coat fuel system components including filters, carburettors, injectors, throttle plates and will then form varnish and carbon deposits in the intake, on valves, and in the combustion chamber.----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The link is here}----- http://www.frost.co.uk/protect-your-veh ... st-ethanol ---------------------------I had EXACTLY these symptoms earlier this year and found water in the tank when I hadn't even washed the bike or had it near any soucrce of water at all.... I removed about an egg-cup full from approx. half a Classic 500 tank...I drained the tank completely and re-filled with the "super" grade... I also gave the carb a full strip, "sonic" wash and re-build...So far ??------------OK..
By Cafeman
#23594
I agree with beezabryan, most likely the pilot circuit is clogged, and/or the air screw is not set correctly. Either could be the issue. How many turns out from "gently" seated is the air screw? Short of that, You might get away with removing the screw and blasting some carb spray in the orifice. It has worked for me many times on old dirtbikes, and saves removing the carb. But if you have to remove the carb, the best way to clean and flush is to plug with a finger the various orifices as you spray fluid through them, and backflush. This forces the fluid to flow through the whole circuit being flushed vs. taking the short way out and bypassing things fluid coming out an orifice and squirting you in the eye!

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