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| twinterx |
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 twinterx L Plate Warrior
Joined: 02 Nov 2016 Karma :  
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 Posted: 20:44 - 02 Nov 2016 Post subject: Kawasaki ER5 Jerking When riding (Not in Neutral) |
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Hi,
I recently bought an Er5 off the riding school which I did my A2 test with.
I have fit a restrictor to it to restrict it to 46.6bhp.
I rode it out a couple of times, when on some blasts round my local area, it ran beautifully, no issues what so ever.
I havent rode it in a few days. It was very cold today, took some going to get it idling when I started it.
I rode for about 2/3 minutes out of my village perfectly, no issues. Then as I geared down the bike started jerking. Like it was running out of fuel intermittently.
I pulled over, sat it in neutral, it idled fine, I revved it through the rev range, no jerks.
Put it in first, rode off, and it jerked again... and all the way home.
Could it be just that it is cold?
Any ideas?
Thanks, Tom |
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| jaffa90 |
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 jaffa90 World Chat Champion
Joined: 06 Apr 2016 Karma :    
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| stinkwheel |
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 stinkwheel Bovine Proctologist

Joined: 12 Jul 2004 Karma :    
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 Posted: 21:42 - 02 Nov 2016 Post subject: |
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Does sound like fuel starvation, misfiring under load but running normaly at a standstill (you use loads more fuel when under load).
I normally harp on about electrics usually being the main problem when bikes misfire but this COULD be a fuelling problem. It could also be water in the fuel or a blocked tank breather (many other things it could also be).
So you can check for water in the tank by looking in the tank with a torch, it would form a layer or "bubbles" on the bottom. Eliminate a blocked breather by riding it with the fuel cap open and see if the problem goes away.
My KLE500 (practically the same engine as yours) did develop a fault recently where a load of corrosion had formed on the needle valves in the carbs, jamming them in place. Mine were WELL stuck and needed physically removing and cleaning. Slightly stuck ones might be shifted by tapping the sides of the float bowl with a lump of wood. I'm still blaming ethanol in the fuel for my problems.
Another thing those bikes were prone to was carb icing. The circumstances don't seem to fit (normally it causes the engine to die or misfire when you back off after a period of sustained high-speed riding in icy, damp conditions). They are fitted with a carb anti-icing system to prevent this. Coolant is routed round the back of the carb float bowls. There is an inline filter in the hose delivering this coolant that can become blocked.
You may land up pulling and cleaning the carbs but also check condition of the fuel filter, fuel tap and fuel hoses first. Early models (pre '96) could have significant degradation of the fuel lines and gauze filter in the tank due to the afore-mentioned ethanol in the petrol. ____________________ “Rule one: Always stick around for one more drink. That's when things happen. That's when you find out everything you want to know.”
I did the 2010 Round Britain Rally on my 350 Bullet. 89 landmarks, 3 months, 9,500 miles. |
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| Teflon-Mike |
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 Teflon-Mike tl;dr

Joined: 01 Jun 2010 Karma :    
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 Posted: 01:12 - 03 Nov 2016 Post subject: |
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Before getting too deep in spanners... they change the petrol over in the petrol stations around september/october and march/april from 'summer; to 'winter' grades; and its actually a statutory requirement I'm told.
Kawasaki's in the early 90's suffered a widely published recall due to 'carb icing' issues in the colder months... and I have encountered a few folk who have had this niggle reccur on bikes that were grey or parallel imported and not subject to recall... and most often this time of year when the petrol grades swap over and they still have summer fuel in the tank when it gets nippy....
It MAY be worth giving the thing a good blast and running it onto reserve and as far on that as you dare to drain the tank of as much 'summer' grade fuel as you can, and then fill up at a popular filling station that aught by now be on winter grade... go for another ride and see if problem 'clears' on its own. ____________________ My Webby'Tef's-tQ, loads of stuff about my bikes, my Land-Rovers, and the stuff I do with them!
Current Bikes:'Honda VF1000F' ;'CB750F2N' ;'CB125TD ( 6 3 of em!)'; 'Montesa Cota 248'. Learner FAQ's:= 'U want to Ride a Motorbike! Where Do U start?' |
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| Rogerborg |
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 Rogerborg nimbA

Joined: 26 Oct 2010 Karma :    
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 Posted: 10:04 - 03 Nov 2016 Post subject: |
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| stinkwheel wrote: | a blocked tank breather |
Does the filler cap whistle after riding the bike, or if you swirl the tank, or if you just look at it askance?
If it doesn't, then it'd be the first Kawasaki I've seen (or heard, or not heard) that didn't, and I'd start by finding any vent hole in the cap and cleaning it out. ____________________ Biking is 1/20th as dangerous as horse riding.
GONE: HN125-8, LF-250B, GPz 305, GPZ 500S, Burgman 400 // RIDING: F650GS (800 twin), Royal Enfield Bullet Electra 500 AVL, Ninja 250R because racebike |
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| twinterx |
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 twinterx L Plate Warrior
Joined: 02 Nov 2016 Karma :  
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| MahatmaAndhi |
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 MahatmaAndhi Traffic Copper

Joined: 10 Jun 2015 Karma :     
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| stinkwheel |
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 stinkwheel Bovine Proctologist

Joined: 12 Jul 2004 Karma :    
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| TheManWithThe... |
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 TheManWithThe... Brolly Dolly

Joined: 30 Aug 2010 Karma :  
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| doggone |
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 doggone World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 May 2004 Karma :    
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| stinkwheel |
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 stinkwheel Bovine Proctologist

Joined: 12 Jul 2004 Karma :    
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| mentalboy |
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 mentalboy World Chat Champion

Joined: 05 May 2012 Karma :   
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| twinterx |
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 twinterx L Plate Warrior
Joined: 02 Nov 2016 Karma :  
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| twinterx |
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 twinterx L Plate Warrior
Joined: 02 Nov 2016 Karma :  
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 Posted: 22:42 - 16 Nov 2016 Post subject: I have done some work |
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Okay, so this evening i took the bike to my mates house to work on it in his garage.
On the way there, rode like garbage as expected..
Started by taking the tank off and draining it. Only to check the fuel filters, they are fine....
Looking around, saw that the filter for the Coolant was vile.
The little pink pellet thing had the bottom third black. The filter was clogged, it was vile...
Cleaned this out, threw it back together... Put about a litre and a half of fuel in, but accident pierced the reserve tank line. Fuel went everywhere.
Immidietely took the pipes off, stopped the spillage.
But the fuel line down past the pierce(about 1cm) and re attached the pipe.
Had the bike running fine on reserve. In my haste to see if the coolant fix had fixed my issue, i took the bike out, forgetting to fill the tank up!
It seemed to ride much better! holding speed well, not jerking around nearly as much!
I then ran out of fuel.....
After putting more in, switching it to prime, and trying to start the bike... nothing...
The bike would not start....
tried periodically throughout the hour. Nothing.
Hoping its flooded... my mate will try to start it in the morning.
A few questions:
If it was carb icing, would it still be mis firing a little to begin with? Would this iron out after a few minutes riding?
OR is the jerking likely to be due to lack of fuel and it could be that my issue is now fixed..
Why wont my bike start? My issue with believing its flooded is that, it went from empty, to flooded, without starting?? how is that possible.. |
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| Azoth |
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 Azoth Brolly Dolly

Joined: 07 Jul 2016 Karma :  
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| pompousporcup... |
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 pompousporcup... World Chat Champion
Joined: 15 Apr 2015 Karma :   
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| twinterx |
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 twinterx L Plate Warrior
Joined: 02 Nov 2016 Karma :  
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 Posted: 12:12 - 20 Nov 2016 Post subject: |
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| sharpe2002 wrote: | i was under the impression carb icing was only really prominent in very cold conditions and under engine load, where there is lots and lots of cold air passing through the carbs that cause them to freeze/ice and wouldn't expect it after a bit of idling and when trying to get up to speed.. |
Funny you say that! After thinking it had improved, it is still doing it.
It is still cold out... but that filter is now clear and it still does it.
Its definitely an improvement on what it was like before! Its not nearly as bad, it did it like 80% of the time before. now its like 30-40%.
I got the bike going.. I had to bump start it, in second gear, for quite some time with the choke on.
I was pushing it down the road with my mate on it, with it turning over, until eventually it fired up.
I rode in 2 minutes back to his house, let it warm up, turned it off.
Got back on it 30-40 minutes later, started sweet... Started riding out his house, and it died again, needed to bump start to get it going again.
Then rode it my 10 minute journey home, and it was still losing power/backfiring.
It did seem to only do it when I came off the throttle. |
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| RhynoCZ |
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 RhynoCZ Super Spammer

Joined: 09 Mar 2012 Karma :     
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 Posted: 12:54 - 20 Nov 2016 Post subject: |
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| sharpe2002 wrote: | i was under the impression carb icing was only really prominent in very cold conditions and under engine load, where there is lots and lots of cold air passing through the carbs that cause them to freeze/ice and wouldn't expect it after a bit of idling and when trying to get up to speed. |
I was riding various motorcycles in below 0°C and none of them had a problem.
I bet my money on dirt and/or water in the fuel. With all the aditives in the petrol these days, when mixed with water it creates a slime like substance, that tends to, due to the shape of the carburetor bowls, form small balls, that get sucked into the jets under load.
| twinterx wrote: | I was going to ask though, is there fuel additives which clean the system these days? |
There are and they do work, to a certain extent. They are not magical substances that just fix things, but they do make stuff better. Especially when you have an old neglected engine/carbs. It mostly dissolves all the white residue that's left after petrol evaporates and carbon deposits. ____________________ '87 Honda XBR 500, '96 Kawasaki ZX7R P1, '90 Honda CB-1, '88 Kawasaki GPz550, MZ 150 ETZ
'95 Mercedes-Benz w202 C200 CGI, '98 Mercedes-Benz w210 E200 Kompressor |
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 9 years, 228 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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