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TYS175 Downhill Stall


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When I am going downhill, the engine revs tend to drop slightly (and it is less responsive) and occasionally it coughs and dies as I open it up. I have the float height set accurately at 18mm.

This is not the more common four stroke cough as I have spent a great deal of time optimsing the carb settings. It runs fine on the flat or uphill at low revs and picks up cleanly from low revs without any hesitation. The problem is ONLY when the bike is going down a drop.

For your info I have the 17.5 pilot jet. Mine runs best with two turns on the fuel screw (it is sensitive to even a 1/4 turn). I have found that three turns as recomended by others is way too rich.

If the bike has a tendency for the revs to drop slightly and occasinally stall when going downhill, is this a float height related issue? What is happening and should I try to increase the float height?

Any thoughts would eb gratefully appreciated.

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I know that Birks recomends starting at 3 turns out with a 17.5 pilot, but on my bike 3 turns is way too rich. At three turns the plug goes really sooty and it becomes less responsive. You can hear it too as the exhaust note softens.

I have found my bike really likes to run on the lean side. The throttle is more responsive and it feels alot more powerful. When it was warm it would run really well on the highest clip (leanest) on the needle. Now it's so cold it runs better on the middle clip. I run a 100 main jet now having experimented with 100, 102.5, 105 and 110.

I was originally thinking that the problem was carburation, but I have also lightened the flywheel, and I think now that may be the problem. It may be it's just me stalling it as the tickover is too low? I'm going to try running it with a higher tickover to see if that helps and failing that I'm going try it with the orginal flywheel back on (I bought one to lighten off ebay for

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Not going to hurt anything by playing with the float level a bit.

I have had similar situations with the kiehins and oko carbs on the 2T bikes, and another 1.5 mm drop in float height helped a lot on downhill situations with no other problems.

Jus got to play a bit!

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  • 3 weeks later...

Since my original post I have been trying to figure out the cause of the problem, and I now seem to have it solved. Although I had the float height set accurately at 18mm, I wondered if this was anything to do with the problem. The float hinges from the back of the float chamber, and when going downhill I reasoned that the relative fuel level in the float chamber would be lower when going down hill as the float would cut it off earlier and I wondered if this was anything to do with it.

I tried increasing the fuel level by setting the float at 17mm, and I am pleased to say that the problem seems to have been cured.

If any other lurkers are interested in some other development work which I have done. I had the head off to check the condition and de-coke. Most of you will know about the miss match of inlet manifold and inlet port (there is a nasty step where the two faces meet), and (with the head off and using a die grinder) I gently removed quite a bit of material to match the inlet manifold to match the inlet port which is now really nice.

With the valves out I also noticed that the steel valve seat inserts were also rather a

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Since my original post I have been trying to figure out the cause of the problem, and I now seem to have it solved. Although I had the float height set accurately at 18mm, I wondered if this was anything to do with the problem. The float hinges from the back of the float chamber, and when going downhill I reasoned that the relative fuel level in the float chamber would be lower when going down hill as the float would cut it off earlier and I wondered if this was anything to do with it.

I tried increasing the fuel level by setting the float at 17mm, and I am pleased to say that the problem seems to have been cured.

If any other lurkers are interested in some other development work which I have done. I had the head off to check the condition and de-coke. Most of you will know about the miss match of inlet manifold and inlet port (there is a nasty step where the two faces meet), and (with the head off and using a die grinder) I gently removed quite a bit of material to match the inlet manifold to match the inlet port which is now really nice.

With the valves out I also noticed that the steel valve seat inserts were also rather a

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