My Triking has always done this thing where, if i come hot into a fairly fast and sharp corner, it will run on one cylinder for like 10 seconds and then they both start firing again. I dont know which cylinder i lose, nor the cause (I assume fuel starvation OR flooding, but I could be somehting else for all I know.
Has anyone else experienced this?
Flooding/starving carb?
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- Posts: 7
- Joined: Tue Oct 16, 2018 10:07 pm
- Location: Larkspur
Re: Flooding/starving carb?
Yes!
It wasn't on a Triking, in fact I can't remember what it was actually on*, but the cause was a loose connection to a condenser. In fact it had completely cracked through at the solder joint into the can and the modest cornering force was enough to move it out of contact and drop the ignition out.
*I've now remembered - it was my Triumph TR7.
It wasn't on a Triking, in fact I can't remember what it was actually on*, but the cause was a loose connection to a condenser. In fact it had completely cracked through at the solder joint into the can and the modest cornering force was enough to move it out of contact and drop the ignition out.
*I've now remembered - it was my Triumph TR7.
Re: Flooding/starving carb?
Have you tried fitting the anti-surge washers above the main jets, assuming you have Phf36 carbs.?
Re: Flooding/starving carb?
I have very similar symptoms on type 3 with PHF36s.
Smaller float needles helped a bit - as did lowering the pressure from the fuel pump by running a return to the tank downstream from the pump. I also run the anti-surge washers - although I think they are to guard against leanness rather than coping with richness.
It can still readily be provoked though to cut onto one - OK at wider throttle openings but particularly noticeable if after cornering hard there isn't a need to floor it.
It is definitely richness rather than leanness on mine - you can smell the fuel. I think the carbs are just not designed to have to cope with the fuel slosh caused by cornering without leaning per motorcycle application.
I may try a fuel pressure regulator again, to bring the fuel pressure down a bit more - but struggle to get the motivation as it runs very well in most conditions.
I would be very interested to read any updates from you about anything else you try.
Cheers
Rohan (NZ)
Smaller float needles helped a bit - as did lowering the pressure from the fuel pump by running a return to the tank downstream from the pump. I also run the anti-surge washers - although I think they are to guard against leanness rather than coping with richness.
It can still readily be provoked though to cut onto one - OK at wider throttle openings but particularly noticeable if after cornering hard there isn't a need to floor it.
It is definitely richness rather than leanness on mine - you can smell the fuel. I think the carbs are just not designed to have to cope with the fuel slosh caused by cornering without leaning per motorcycle application.
I may try a fuel pressure regulator again, to bring the fuel pressure down a bit more - but struggle to get the motivation as it runs very well in most conditions.
I would be very interested to read any updates from you about anything else you try.
Cheers
Rohan (NZ)
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- Posts: 7
- Joined: Tue Oct 16, 2018 10:07 pm
- Location: Larkspur
Re: Flooding/starving carb?
Thanks for the feedback guys. Best I can tell, various owners hve tried various fixes and some seem to help a it but no one has figured out how to solve the issue completely. I have long since fitted electric ignition to mine, so I do believe its a fuel/carb related issue. I do not smell gas when this happens, personally. The mystery continues. i hope someone may jump on here who has figured this one out and share the fix!
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- Posts: 29
- Joined: Fri Sep 28, 2018 7:21 am
- Location: Norfolk
Re: Flooding/starving carb?
I managed a 99% cure by fitting 150 or 175 needle valves( can’t remember without looking) rather than gravity fed 300 size as standard. Fitted a malpassi Filter king to smooth out fuel pump pulses between pump and carbs . Main benefit was fitting dell Otto surge washers just above main jets. I do not have a return pipe to the fuel tank. This has worked for me.