• 4 Stroke Husqvarna Motorcycles Made In Italy - About 1989 to 2014
    TE = 4st Enduro & TC = 4st Cross

  • Hi everyone,

    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 The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.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!

Throttle Position Sensor

Bill502

Husqvarna
AA Class
Is there any way to check the TPS on a 2007 TE250? We are trying get rid of the off idle bog on the bike. It has the JD jetting in the carb and the o-ring mod on the arm we have checked the valves and everything seems to be in spec. Some one suggested the Boysen Quick shot 2 is this a neccesary Mod? I have not seen any one mention this any where in the FI/Carb section. The bike will stall if you snap the throttle open fast. I'm trying to help a friend sort this out he just bought this bike and is getting kind of discouraged with it.
 
I believe there are instructions in the owners manual regarding the tps, if not certainly in the service manual. But I seriously doubt the tps is the issue.


There is absolutely no reason that bike should bog at all. I have a 2006 te250. Either there is not enough fuel squirted in when the throttle is rapidly opened (probable) or there is too much.

The needle & clip setting, and pilot circuit could also be not optimal, and of course the leak jet in the bottom of the bowl is the primary item that sets the AP squirt, along with the AP arm screw setting. Refer to this thread for pictures, and you could even read this information if you wanted to know more about the AP system:
http://www.cafehusky.com/forums/showthread.php?t=6890

Pull the choke out a little and see if that helps/hurts, then pull the hot start out a little and see if that helps/hurts. You should be able to get things nicely tuned up.
 
Coffee;96215 said:
I believe there are instructions in the owners manual regarding the tps, if not certainly in the service manual. But I seriously doubt the tps is the issue.


There is absolutely no reason that bike should bog at all. I have a 2006 te250. Either there is not enough fuel squirted in when the throttle is rapidly opened (probable) or there is too much.

The needle & clip setting, and pilot circuit could also be not optimal, and of course the leak jet in the bottom of the bowl is the primary item that sets the AP squirt, along with the AP arm screw setting. Refer to this thread for pictures, and you could even read this information if you wanted to know more about the AP system:
http://www.cafehusky.com/forums/showthread.php?t=6890

Pull the choke out a little and see if that helps/hurts, then pull the hot start out a little and see if that helps/hurts. You should be able to get things nicely tuned up.

I highly recommend diving into Coffee's accelerator pump thread (it's very thorough and informative) and I'd suggest that before doing any major surgery on the bike you check that your mate's a.p. is squirting properly, as per Coffee's videos - nozzles can block and the (tiny) one way valves can get jammed with dirt.

Finally, if the bike is running good on a static throttle setting then I'd be inclined to say that the TPS is fine. Let us know how it goes.
 
I doubt the TPS is the issue. (although one thing you can quickly check is that the little tiny connector (#109 on the parts fiche) isn't missing) The TPS wont work without it, and it's easy to lose when the TPS is disconnected.

Is this a JD kit that you guys installed, or are you taking someone else's word for it? If you didn't install it yourselves, verify that the right jetting is actually installed.
Is the entire carb absolutely clean inside?(not just the bowl, but the entire carb, top to bottom, inside & out- every orifice, nook & crannie hospital clean)

There are a few things that this could be;

Dirt in the AP diaphragm (we had a guy in our club that somehow had his completely packed with dirt, god only knows how it got in there)
Partly clogged Pilot
Partly clogged Main
AP not working properly due to a clog or a bad seal somewhere(or as pointed out above).
Is the JD Oring on the AP screw present?
Small leak between carb & motor...

Sometimes there are a combo of issues contributing to the problem.
 
Update: I found out how to check the TPS in the Manual with a Meter and the TPS checks ok. We also read and checked all the videos and information on the AP squirt duration and found that the AP is functioning ok,although not the way we would like it too, it does not appear to be blocked in any way.There is a #65 leak jet in there now and we have an 35 on order. Yes there is a genuine JD jet kit in the carb. current jetting in the carb is
Red Needle clip in forth pos.
180 Main
Pilot 42
Leak 65
air fuel screw 1.5 out
bike starts up and idles and revs through the whole range and still stumbles and some time stalls when throttle is opened fast. We tried differen't AP screw settings without any differen't results with the O-ring on and off of the linkage. And differen't screw settings also.
The bike may be a little rich on the jetting but still runs good except for the bog and stall condition. We will go all through it again when we get the #35 leak jet. I could not find what the stock jetting was in the manual,they should put all the english and other language sections separate its a pain in the A@#$ lookin through it especially on a computer thats not next to the bike.
 
Sounds lean, not rich, to me. From my chair though the internet thousands of miles away. :)

Have you tried fine tuning your fuel screw? While idling in neutral, keep adjusting the fuel screw for max rpms. If the rpms rise then adjust the throttle stop to keep the rpms low(ish). I would expect more 2 - 2.5 turns out would be best.

And you may want to try red needle in position #5.

I still think it would be a good experiment to have the choke out a little, then the hot start, while riding. Both in steady state and while whacking the throttle open to see what happens.


After much experimenting, if off road riding with constant on/off/on/off throttle a 55 or 65 leak should work ok. If on an open road with occasional whacks of the throttle, the 35 or 45 leak jet works better.

Thanks for letting us know how things are coming along. :thumbsup:
 
Coffee;96603 said:
Sounds lean, not rich, to me. From my chair though the internet thousands of miles away. :)

Have you tried fine tuning your fuel screw? While idling in neutral, keep adjusting the fuel screw for max rpms. If the rpms rise then adjust the throttle stop to keep the rpms low(ish). I would expect more 2 - 2.5 turns out would be best.

And you may want to try red needle in position #5.

I still think it would be a good experiment to have the choke out a little, then the hot start, while riding. Both in steady state and while whacking the throttle open to see what happens.


After much experimenting, if off road riding with constant on/off/on/off throttle a 55 or 65 leak should work ok. If on an open road with occasional whacks of the throttle, the 35 or 45 leak jet works better.

Thanks for letting us know how things are coming along. :thumbsup:
I'll pass this info along as I won't be around for a few days to tinker with the bike. Thanks
Bill
 
Update on my friends 2007 TE250: Changed the leak jet to a 40 and played around with the fuel screw and got it running pretty good, also had a Husky Mech. adjust the float level.We had it on the low side. The manual says to check it on angle but shows the picture with it level???? Thanks to all who advised on this and to Demi for his advice and settings.
Bill
 
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