I had my '47 FL judged awhile back knowing that it had an incorrect carburetor (M74B) and it did quite well. I'd now like to elevate its status past Junior 1st. So in the interest of correctness I found the correct M35 body, built up the carburetor and installed it on the bike. All needles, seats, float (Cotton), throttle shaft bushings, Peek manifold seals, gaskets, etc. were replaced. The float height is set to 1/4". Initial settings are 5 and 2 turns out which should be a little rich. The carb bore is smooth without any signs of gouging or eccentricity at the throttle disk area.
The bike always was and remains a 1-kick starter when cold. However, when it warms up, it intermittently kicks back through the carb at a medium idle with the choke at 1 click and kicks/stalls at normal idle speed indicating a lean condition. I bubble-tested the manifold as per Cotton and it's leak-free. The gas tank is half-full and the gas flows freely through the line when disconnected from the carb. Also, after re-installing the M74B, the motor runs correctly.
I'm no new-comer to rebuilding Linkert carburetors. However, I don't have much experience with M35's and this one has me a bit stumped. I'm thinking that it may be a defect in the brass casting as I've taken it apart twice, carefully examined the low speed circuit, but can't find the problem.
Any suggestions?
Thanks,
Bill Pedalino
The bike always was and remains a 1-kick starter when cold. However, when it warms up, it intermittently kicks back through the carb at a medium idle with the choke at 1 click and kicks/stalls at normal idle speed indicating a lean condition. I bubble-tested the manifold as per Cotton and it's leak-free. The gas tank is half-full and the gas flows freely through the line when disconnected from the carb. Also, after re-installing the M74B, the motor runs correctly.
I'm no new-comer to rebuilding Linkert carburetors. However, I don't have much experience with M35's and this one has me a bit stumped. I'm thinking that it may be a defect in the brass casting as I've taken it apart twice, carefully examined the low speed circuit, but can't find the problem.
Any suggestions?
Thanks,
Bill Pedalino
Comment