- Tue Jan 12, 2016 8:47 am
#54161
Jefrs - I've reduced my popping and banging somewhat but not eliminated it. I replaced the flat biscuit manifold ring with the round 535 one, torquing up cold to 14lbs ft. - there was also a slight leak in the front pipe to silencer joint (and a broken bracket) and thats now been tightened up. I have also noticed that the symptom depends on riding style. When approaching a hazard, if one shuts off completely and immediately blips for the next downshift (i.e. approaching a corner fairly fast) it will induce explosive flatus but if one blips the throttle to change down and then holds it open a little to 'carry speed' into the corner then the condition is more akin to gentle borborygmus. Regarding the plug colour, ignore the soot around the outside thread and look only at the electrode. It is a lot more difficult to do a plug chop with an iridium plug as its less easy to see a colour on the tiny electrodes but the insulation core should be biscuit brown. When you remove the exhaust front pipe there will be plenty of soot in the tract but no hard carbon deposit. If you go to a showroom and run your finger around the inside of any silencer outlet on a secondhand EFI model you will see soot on your finger - a bit more pronounced on the non-cat silencers like my 2011 C5. That doesn't mean an immediate decoke - some of it is due to the residue of modern gasoline by-products exacerbated by the basic fuelling inefficiencies of the antiquated Honda system on the Royal Enfield. As I wrote in my Real Classic report a few months ago, it starts first press of the button, I get a lovely slow tonk tonk tonk tickover 30 seconds after start up, instant throttle response throughout the range with not a hint of flat spot and clean running at full throttle. The down pipe is a nice golden colour (not blue) so all in all I can forgive some farting on the overrun (we all do it as we get older!) and I sleep soundly not worrying about backfiring or soot any more.