Sorry you couldn't figure out what is wrong, it sounds like it's running very rich for some reason and it's flooding out. Send it back and get a new engine is all I can say.
I don't know. I don't see how two brand new carbs can have the exact same symptom.Sorry you couldn't figure out what is wrong, it sounds like it's running very rich for some reason and it's flooding out. Send it back and get a new engine is all I can say.
The new magneto and CDI should arrive today. I will install it as soon as it gets here.Intermittent Magneto is something that can be doing this maybe. I not sure except for a recent post you said the Magneto and CDI were fine. I though there was a new replacement of the magneto in the mail to you. Did you try it? If you have it definitely give it a try. I wore out my arm trying to start that used Coleman generator that was gifted to me. Then a magneto was it.
Itermittant problems are hard to figure. The bike not able to restart after sitting a while I would wonder if fuel is some how continuing to flow even if the engine is not drawing a vacuum when not running. Even if the fuel valve is shut off there is enough fuel in the bowl of these gravity feed fuel systems to maybe flood and engine.
I returned a carb I got that always was doing this. I'd even bet another of the same brand would have done that again if I had just a replacement. I went back to using a old tested carb I had. Sure it was one without an idle adjustment, which is why I got the newer carb, but some stuff is just not good because it is new. The seat and float needle valve I could never get set right. If fuel is not fowled with anything, then the fuel should not flood the engine if float adjusted right. The height of the fuel tank I would hope has a range that it can work with on the frame and not cause any issue.
I want to add this about some design of carbs. The one I returned I noticed that flooding could happen when the engine was running even if the float valve was operating properly. There was a seal that was used along with the mounting of the bowl nut/main jet that was supposed keep fuel from bypassing the main jet. If that seal leaked, the main jet was completely compromised.
The first one I built last summer started right up. Never had a problem. I just sold it for $400 2 weeks ago. This one is a nightmare. I've been working in transmission shops for the past 20 years, so I kinda know what I'm doing. After I build a few more I should know what to look for when, and if these problems ever happen again.bummer that you're going thru all this - at my shop, it usually takes 10 to 15 minutes to sort out a non-start problem
for a new rider, this is not the case tho, as it takes some knowledge specific to these little POSs to spot the cause that quickly, so many folks just keep replacing good parts with new good parts and hope for the best
in your case, you will need to work hard to get familiar with these and understand how all the parts work together, or find someone in your area to help you, or get another one that works well and part by part compare the two
keep in mind that these are simple with only about 12 moving parts in the whole thing
What are the odds of 2 carbs with the same problem? Pretty damn good. Most come pig freakin rich anyway. Maybe your engine has good enough compression and needs a smaller jet. The little pos carbs on these engines only have a single jet for all ranges of rpm. Buy some micro bits. You can buy them at a hobby store. Use the bits to figure out your current size. Use some solder to close the jet hole off, then drill it a few sizes smaller.
That's if it is, in fact, 4 stroking. There's bogging, and 4 stroking. 4 stroking is when you hear a machine gun from the engine and the rpm sounds like 1/2 what it should be. That's because the mixture is rich. If it's bogging, it just won't go. Period. That means it's lean.
Does it wear you out while pedal starting? You hear good compression on the cylinder? You have a new cdi, magneto, all that jazz. You have spark. (you cant adhust the magneto, btw). Air, fuel, spark, compression. You get those in the right proportion, you get a running engine.