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2006 290 Jetting


andilicious
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Hi guys

I'v just picked up the above bike and the jets are:-

Main - 122

Pilot - 35

Needle - D36 on bottom clip of 4

I'm in the UK so looking to make sure the bike is good to ride all winter without chopping and changing too much. How do these look?

There's a lot of spooge in the pipe so thinking it may be too rich for summer but may be ok once it starts getting colder?

Cheers

Andy

Edited by andilicious
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Yea, well it all varies a bit with the bike and carb but sounds close enough. I generally suggest 35-36 range on the pilot and 118-120 on the main. I think you can move the slide needle clip up one notch to lower it a bit.

Mix screw will likely take 3 turns out give or take on the day still.

FWIW, Cheers

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Cheers Cope.

It feels fine now I have sorted a few things out.

The pilot jet wasn't screwed in properly and the vents had been looped together so they weren't venting! I have seen this a few times on trials bikes!!

I dumped the original fuel out which was yellowish and I think mixed at 50:1. I'm running it at 80:1.

Feels so much better on the throttle now after these few adjustments. I think I will leave the needle position for now and see how it runs.

Going to have a play on it for the day today and go from there really.

I think it will need shock and forks servicing and setting up correctly but thats another topic entirely...

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When you say the vents were looped together was there a section of the hose sliced off the bottom, that is how the dellorto carbs are standard

I would have said that the needle sounds like it would be set a bit rich, normally the clip will be in 1 of the middle positions

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Hi Tony,

No the previous owner must have though the sliced out bit was it wearing through so had put a brand new piece of hose in there!!

I am thinking the richest clip position will be slightly rich now but will be fine for the next few months as it gets colder.

I am just going to treat it to a new spark plug so while the tank is off I'm going to change it to clip 2 for now and see how she runs.

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I have noticed that the float valve into the carb is passing slightly and if I leave the petcock on overnight, the fuel overflows out the carb and makes its way into the cylinder.

I have to give it a good 90 - 100 kicks to get it to start after that!!

Question is, on the splatshop 'preparing your Sherco for UK' page it suggest that the float valve should be increased from a 200 up to a 250. Is this relevant to an '06 model 290 as well as the '10-'11 the page refers to?

If I'm buying a new float valve I may as well upgrade it while I'm at it for no extra cost!

Cheers,

Andy

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Check the number stamped on it but changing to a larger size shouldn't affect the jetting as it really only allows fuel to enter the float chamber faster to prevent fuel starvation at sustained high revs & the float valve will still work like normal just quicker if that makes sense

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Likely a 250 init. There was a change on the "10 I think due to the pump fed system flows different I suppose.

Seems too much inrush of fuel when the thing opens is not desirable as it makes the level less stable which effects mixture.

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