Are you talking about the pipe to the carb?
It needs to sit on the battery box, or airbox in still air. Otherwise you'll make the poor girl run pig rich when it gets pressurised![]()
If he sees Katman he has some brains . Yep c the kat.
Couple of things I noted from my GZ, same engine, different carb. When I purchased the bike it was quite jerky, and got worse and worse, thinking the chain was loose went to tighen it. Half the chain was tight, half the chain was loose, and there for naffed. replaced it, and it was fine. Untill the intake manifold (from the carb to the cylander head) apparently cracked (so I have been told by the mechanic that was to lazy to take it off and replace it.....) causing some problems, back firing and some jerky-ness.
Did you not just have an electrical problem recently as well ? Maybe the battery is not fully charged, the charging unit isnt the best in these smalls engines, so maybe cant handle with a half drained battery. I noticed a mild difference when I put a new battery in the GZ. Also run some carb cleaner through the fuel. On a GZ forum I am on, its the number one diagnoses and usualy fixes most of the problems.
@clonak
The battery thing makes sense. Will check that and keep the other things in mind. Carb cleaner is probably a good idea anyway. Will look that up. Many thanks
The battery box vent will have no effect whatsoever on the performance
The manifold could be split, unlikely on one that new though. There is a rubber o-ring on the manifold-to-head surface that can shit out... a cheeky bit of sealant will sort it
No. I tighened the chain, which must have been at the loose half, and when I tried to move the wheel, it got alot tighter, so I loosened it off, then moved the wheel and it was waay to loose, done this a coulpe of times, and realised what was happening. Half had stretched to much, the other half had not stretched. Dont ask me how it works, because I was confused as hell as well. Was the first chain i had done on a motorbike.
Thanks again to Katman for sorting out my bike. He took it for a test ride and didn't actually notice anything wrong with it. Quite a relief, cause I was a wee bit worried. He also checked the chain which seems to be ok and adjusted the fuel/air mix to have run a bit richer. Seemed to have helped but I haven't managed to get on the bike for too long yet today.
Becoming fearless isn't the point. That's impossible. It's learning how to control your fear, and how to be free from it.
Here an update on the jerky bike issue. We checked the frontsprocket the other day. Turns out it had two teeth less than GNs usually have. Upgraded to one tooth more and voila suddenly I have a much smoother running bike which doesn't feel like it's dying at 100 kmh anymore.![]()
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