I'm a returning member who has been gone for some time. I've been trying to sort out running problems on my higher mile (66000 mile) stock 2001 and I THINK it's ignition related. I'm looking for some sage advice here.
The bike was running reasonably well on a ride though it seemed to run a little rough (partial miss or something else causing a weak cylinder) before it got really rough. Then it got low on power and felt like I'd lost at least one cylinder.
What I've discovered so far.
WITH OR WITHOUT VBOOST CONNECTED: From about 6000 to 6500 the engine sound changes (little louder) but no additional power, if I get up past around 6500 rpm it will suddenly pick up power and smooth out like a cylinder or two fired up. There are occasional brief drop outs but mostly better (but not right) all the way to red line. It seems like something is changing like maybe timing (there is good spark at each plug, see below)??
Carbs were cleaned, float level set and sync'd last summer. I shotgunned them recently during trouble shooting with no change.
Coils ohm out at 3.1 to 3.3 ohms and 21K to 25K plug cap to connector. Plug wires alone on 1 and 3 are around 9K, didn't check the 2 and 4 wires off the coil due to PITA access. Coil cases on 1 and 3 don't show any cracks.
Pick-up ohms out at 103 ohms at running temp.
The ignitor wires leading to the ignition coils (the ones that connect to the yellow connectors on the coils) are isolated from ground and harness still has all wrap tape intact (no abrasions).
If the Vboost controller is connected the wire leading to the number 3 cylinder coil wire (not the plug wire) losses total isolation and shows 37K ohms to ground. This has been traced to the Vboost itself and not the stock gray wire that goes between the Vboost controller and the yellow wire for the #3 ignition coil. NOTE The running issue is unchanged by electrically connnecting or disconnecting the Vboost controller so I don't think the poor isolation from ground is causing the current problem, don't know it it is causing other issues though.
Plugs all look the same and show a clean burning engine (light tan color). All ohm out (top to electrode) at about 4.2K ohm. A spare plug grounded to the frame and connected to any plug wire shows good spark on all 4 cylinders.
If you pull a plug wire while the bike is running at near idle and a bit rough the engine drags down about the same for each cylinder. In other words a weak cylinder or misfiring cylinder is not obvious.
Also I've checked temps on each cylinder with an infared temp gauge aimed at the exhaust pipe right next to the cylinder. All cylinders are pretty even though number 3 sometimes is a little warmer. I've done this during warm up, at idle and right after a test ride.
I'm to the point I THINK my next step is replacing ignition components, but which ones first?? Any ideas on what else to check?
Much thanks in advance to anyone who responds.
The bike was running reasonably well on a ride though it seemed to run a little rough (partial miss or something else causing a weak cylinder) before it got really rough. Then it got low on power and felt like I'd lost at least one cylinder.
What I've discovered so far.
WITH OR WITHOUT VBOOST CONNECTED: From about 6000 to 6500 the engine sound changes (little louder) but no additional power, if I get up past around 6500 rpm it will suddenly pick up power and smooth out like a cylinder or two fired up. There are occasional brief drop outs but mostly better (but not right) all the way to red line. It seems like something is changing like maybe timing (there is good spark at each plug, see below)??
Carbs were cleaned, float level set and sync'd last summer. I shotgunned them recently during trouble shooting with no change.
Coils ohm out at 3.1 to 3.3 ohms and 21K to 25K plug cap to connector. Plug wires alone on 1 and 3 are around 9K, didn't check the 2 and 4 wires off the coil due to PITA access. Coil cases on 1 and 3 don't show any cracks.
Pick-up ohms out at 103 ohms at running temp.
The ignitor wires leading to the ignition coils (the ones that connect to the yellow connectors on the coils) are isolated from ground and harness still has all wrap tape intact (no abrasions).
If the Vboost controller is connected the wire leading to the number 3 cylinder coil wire (not the plug wire) losses total isolation and shows 37K ohms to ground. This has been traced to the Vboost itself and not the stock gray wire that goes between the Vboost controller and the yellow wire for the #3 ignition coil. NOTE The running issue is unchanged by electrically connnecting or disconnecting the Vboost controller so I don't think the poor isolation from ground is causing the current problem, don't know it it is causing other issues though.
Plugs all look the same and show a clean burning engine (light tan color). All ohm out (top to electrode) at about 4.2K ohm. A spare plug grounded to the frame and connected to any plug wire shows good spark on all 4 cylinders.
If you pull a plug wire while the bike is running at near idle and a bit rough the engine drags down about the same for each cylinder. In other words a weak cylinder or misfiring cylinder is not obvious.
Also I've checked temps on each cylinder with an infared temp gauge aimed at the exhaust pipe right next to the cylinder. All cylinders are pretty even though number 3 sometimes is a little warmer. I've done this during warm up, at idle and right after a test ride.
I'm to the point I THINK my next step is replacing ignition components, but which ones first?? Any ideas on what else to check?
Much thanks in advance to anyone who responds.