As you all know, Coffee (Dean) passed away a couple of years ago. I am Dean's ex-wife's husband and happen to have spent my career in tech. Over the years, I occasionally helped Dean with various tech issues.
When he passed, I worked with his kids to gather the necessary credentials to keep this site running. Since then (and for however long they worked with Coffee), Woodschick and Dirtdame have been maintaining the site and covering the costs. Without their hard work and financial support, CafeHusky would have been lost.
Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve been working to migrate the site to a free cloud compute instance so that Woodschick and Dirtdame no longer have to fund it. At the same time, I’ve updated the site to a current version of XenForo (the discussion software it runs on). The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.
Unfortunately, the new software version doesn’t support importing the old site’s styles, so for now, you’ll see the XenForo default style. This may change over time.
Coffee didn’t document the work he did on the site, so I’ve been digging through the old setup to understand how everything was running. There may still be things I’ve missed. One known issue is that email functionality is not yet working on the new site, but I hope to resolve this over time.
Thanks for your patience and support!
HUSKYNJ;99622 said:It came with the blue needle already in place and then I switched out the 175 to a 180. Those are all the changes I had made besides putting the clip to the #4 position. I didn't touch anything else because nothing else came with the little bag of needles, etc.
motosapiens;99678 said:well, i guess i'm on the bandwagon too. i'm not all that hard to please, so the mikuni was running fine, but it's a bit finicky, and by the time you get it to where it will start and run decently in the morning, then it gets to be painful to restart (hot engine) later in the day, and the stock needle feels rich in clip#2 as the weather warms, but clip#1 is unacceptably lean and low on power at small throttle openings..
motosapiens;99678 said:well, i guess i'm on the bandwagon too. i'm not all that hard to please, so the mikuni was running fine, but it's a bit finicky, and by the time you get it to where it will start and run decently in the morning, then it gets to be painful to restart (hot engine) later in the day, and the stock needle feels rich in clip#2 as the weather warms, but clip#1 is unacceptably lean and low on power at small throttle openings. so rather than spend any time or money screwing with it, and with the idaho city isde qualifier fast approaching, i decided to pull the trigger so i wouldn't have to worry about kicking 10 times to start the bike at a gas stop or check or if i stall.
carb showed up saturday when i got home from 85 miles of hard fast singletrack in idaho city, and installing it went fairly smooth. stock cable and the noodle from the mikuni carb in place of the straight ferrule on the keihin. i scratched my head for a bit on the noodle and finally figured i'd start with it screwed all the way in, then screw the cap on (which unscrews the noodle 1-2 turns) then tighten the jam nut on the noodle, and live happily. Not quite as convenient as the straight ferrule, cuz it seems i'll have to loosen the jamnut to unscrew the carb top, but it's still way easier than 2 tiny easy-to-strip screws on the mikuni or the newer keihins. only annoyance is that these older carbs do appear to require the floatbowl removed to change the pilot. sigh. i guess i can do that twice a year.
based on what i read, i started with 42p, red #2, 175 (09 wr300), and figured that might be rich. it is slightly rich but perfectly rideable, and better than anything i found with the mikuni. all my 40p's are busy (in my 200 and my kx250) so i guess i'll have to get another one, and also a 172 main for rising temps and altitudes as the summer goes on, but this setup should work great for this weekend's race. Oddly enough, it's almost the exact same jetting that worked for my 2002 300exc that had the exact same carb.btw, this is for 4000-5000', 50-80 degrees, normally very low humidity, but today is was not low (raining, in fact).
went for just a short ride today to test, and it starts easier, esp when warm, and carburetes cleaner at very small throttle openings, and seems to have a bit more snap. I can't comment on peak hp because i'm a pansy and too scared to go that fast, lol.
i'm starting to feel really really comfortable on this bike now. made a few minor clicks away from LT's stock settings on the suspension, and now the carb and motor response seems to be just right. All that's left is to learn to ride.
thanks to all the folks that have posted in this thread and shared their experiences. that made the whole thing pretty easy.
HUSKYNJ;99792 said:If my local dealer doesn't have the 48 pilot, then I will hopefully order it on the internet and try to get it here by the weekend. Anywhere you suggest with the link for the part?
HUSKYNJ;99790 said:Is the exact model I am looking for a '48 pilot for a PWK Keihin carb'? I have the carb apart in the garage waiting to decide on what to do for the pilot but worried if it might not start again. I am going to also do what Norman said about the throttle cable so we'll see how it goes.
Rob578;100107 said:I have R_Littles's problem, I can not get this thing to start. New 09 300 I've ridden it a couple of weekends, have taken the mikuni off about a 100 times and still couldn't get it right, it's close but not as perfect as the KDX I have. So I ordered the keihin. 175M 45PJ air screw out 2 turns idle screw turned in enough to raise the slide to match the mikuni,
have spark and fuel, didn't measure the float level but it looks close enough.
On the KDX if I raise the choke I can't touch the throttle or it will never start, I do that on this bike and kick a couple times and pull the plug and the plug is nearly dry. Twist the throttle and the plug is wet but no go.
I have kicked this thing so much my knee is swollen.
Next step is to put the mikuni back on, warm it up good then slap the keihin back on.
Any other ideas? I'd go to a bigger pilot but the kit didn't come with one and I had to order it.
Rob578;100107 said:I have R_Littles's problem, I can not get this thing to start. New 09 300 I've ridden it a couple of weekends, have taken the mikuni off about a 100 times and still couldn't get it right, it's close but not as perfect as the KDX I have. So I ordered the keihin. 175M 45PJ air screw out 2 turns idle screw turned in enough to raise the slide to match the mikuni,
have spark and fuel, didn't measure the float level but it looks close enough.
On the KDX if I raise the choke I can't touch the throttle or it will never start, I do that on this bike and kick a couple times and pull the plug and the plug is nearly dry. Twist the throttle and the plug is wet but no go.
I have kicked this thing so much my knee is swollen.
Next step is to put the mikuni back on, warm it up good then slap the keihin back on.
Any other ideas? I'd go to a bigger pilot but the kit didn't come with one and I had to order it.