Bike acts like it has run out of fuel after using only one gallon
Mine was the same year 2008 as yours. I bought it in march of 2008 and sold it after my 2nd failed back surgery late 2011. I ended up in a wheelchair for almost 5 months and thought for sure my riding days were over. Only the passed 3 years I'm back to riding. Man do I miss that bike. Hands down the best street bike I ever owned. And I've had many over the years. But my heart is riding dirt.
Yeah I will take another look at the fuel lines.
I just remembered an incident that occurred right after I put the pumper in. The bike ran out of gas in main (at the normal 80ish mile mark). I flicked it to reserve, and it would not start. I tried it several times and it would not start at all. I started to push the bike and after pushing it for about a half an mile, just on a whim, I hit the starter button and it started right up. Not sure if this info would help anyone decipher this mystery?
I just remembered an incident that occurred right after I put the pumper in. The bike ran out of gas in main (at the normal 80ish mile mark). I flicked it to reserve, and it would not start. I tried it several times and it would not start at all. I started to push the bike and after pushing it for about a half an mile, just on a whim, I hit the starter button and it started right up. Not sure if this info would help anyone decipher this mystery?
When the bike stalls and you go to restart it the level in the bowl is low. The cranking engine doesn't pull enough air to gather gas up and the bike wont reach running mixture.
There's still a little fuel making it past the kink, but not enough to run the bike. So, when you let it sit the bowl fills back up. In this case it'll run until the bike draws down the fuel in the bowl faster than the weak flow can replenish it. It would run a shorter time at full throttle than at part throttle.
I would disassemble until you find the blockage and also check the float level on the carb.
Always asked "what changed" when trouble shooting. Also check the lines for flow by forcing compressed air through them if you can.
The stock setup on those fuel lines are weird, if I recall right, with both lines going around some wiring or something in a way that makes it hard to lift the tank out. It's a PITA.
The TM takes fuel from a different position than the stock CVK IIRC. This may be the source of the problem if the stock line was rerouted. It seems to me the kink or blockage will be below the petcock as it effects both reserve and main.
Check the visible lines first to maybe avoid a bigger-than-it-needs-to-be job.
Last edited by taxonomy; Sep 9, 2016 at 06:37 PM.
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