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What did you do to your Yamaha today?

Discussion in 'XJ Technical Chat' started by Cutlass84, Jun 4, 2007.

  1. StorminNorman

    StorminNorman Member

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    Thank you for the heads up. I haven't had much issue with it yet. Hopefully, I complete the swap in the next week and can see how it rides.
     
  2. Roast644

    Roast644 Well-Known Member

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    Annual "wake up from hibernation" day yesterday. Oil change on the 750, wrestling the octopus on the 1100, looking forward to the extra evening daylight now. Some of you guys have been riding all winter, but just have thicker skin than me! Warmer weather is coming...
     
    Uxbridge Brule likes this.
  3. Huntchuks

    Huntchuks Well-Known Member

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    Yesterday I went to my son's place to work on our bass boat. He has three bikes stored under a large tarp for the winter. His Kaw, on the right side, tipped over towards the right and pulled my XJ700 on its left and his Honda to the left of the XJ, over. Broke my clutch lever off (at the base!). Took a while but got it running. Today, I think, I'll start up the Maxim X, hopefully, and take a spin. Should try to hit 70 F later today.
     
  4. Brhatweed

    Brhatweed Well-Known Member

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    That was my Ex and the tentacles in my wallet befire I was traded in for a newer model.


    Put some KM's on the SECA today, we hit a max of 49F and I really didn't feel like dealing with anything or anyone. Gotta say it stores well in that all I've had to do so far really is open the fuel, add a quarter pull to the rich lever and it fires right off. Now the cold front is blowing thru and it's going to spiral downward for the next week or so.
     
    Roast644 and chacal like this.
  5. Tristan Kernick

    Tristan Kernick Active Member

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    Even with a bit of wear and tear, she’s still a handsome devil, isn’t she?
    IMG_9723.jpeg

    Have had an eventful offseason. Replaced handlebars, replaced MC (just to get one that sits flat), added heated grips, replaced wheel bearings, rebuilt forks, replaced a valve shim, and did the performance shifter pawl upgrade.

    Rides great, though apparently I’m slipping out of gear sometimes when I’m in second. I’ve heard this is a problem with worn shift dogs, but since I replaced the pawl and springs beneath the side cover, I’m somewhat suspicious that I mucked something up. Not a big deal anyways, just gotta short shift into 3rd and I’m fine.
     
  6. Brhatweed

    Brhatweed Well-Known Member

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    I'm liking it. Nice Maxim.
     
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  7. ScottFree

    ScottFree Active Member

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    That Maxim looks so much prettier than mine!

    Where'd you get the MC? I'm still running the stock one on a set of Daytona (Japanese "standard" style) bars, and while it works OK (hasn't leaked or sucked air yet, anyway) I know I'm in for an adventure when it's time to flush the brake fluid next fall.

    So the electrical system's up to handling heated grips? That's good to know.
     
    Tristan Kernick likes this.
  8. Tristan Kernick

    Tristan Kernick Active Member

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    I got the MC from chacal, he sells one that’s pretty close to the style of the original and sits flat on the Daytona bars. Those are exactly what I have, and I’ve been very happy with that MC.

    I have had no problems at all with the grips, but I changed out the gauge cluster backlights, the tail light, and the license plate light for LEDs. These Oxford Heaterz draw 4 amps, which equates to something like 50 watts. I’m pretty sure changing the incandescents saves a good bit of power draw, so I can’t verify that these would work on a stock setup.
     
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  9. Brhatweed

    Brhatweed Well-Known Member

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    Well I do know form experience the XJ regulator won't go much higher than about 240 watts so 4 amps at 12 volts is 48 watts and going with the LED's gives you a good margin.
     
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  10. Brhatweed

    Brhatweed Well-Known Member

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    Ran the snowblower and cut a path in the 6.5" of snow, weather geek is threatening 60+ later this week so I want to be ready. Lets see if it happens.
     
  11. ScottFree

    ScottFree Active Member

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    Yeah, we had heavy rain all day Sunday, about an inch of snow Sunday night, then a couple days in the 20s, another inch or so of snow tonight, then 40s on Wednesday, 50s on Thursday-Friday, 60 and sunshine on Saturday. We don't really have "spring" in the midwest; it's more winter days mixed with summer days, slowly turning from mostly winter to mostly summer by the end of April... or sometimes May.

    I really need a string of days when it's wet and drizzly out but warm enough to work in the garage, as I have a ton of bike projects to get done. I have a pile of parts for the Himalayan, which will get valve check and a bunch of electrical accessories that require removing the gas tank as soon as I ride it another 450 miles. The Yamaha's carbs are still sitting in the garage, waiting to be reassembled with a slight adjustment to the float limiter tab (the one that is supposed to keep the floats from dropping far enough to stick open when the carbs are empty), level-set, put back on the bike and synched, plus I have to finish the Seat Rationalization Project (raising the rider portion by about two inches so my fake knee and hip stop screaming at me).

    Luckily, there should be plenty of these days in April... which is good because I'm hearing the clock ticking. The Slimey Crud Run weekend is less than seven weeks away, and I really hope to have the Yamaha ready for that ~600 mile trip; and I'm leaving for New Orleans on the Himalayan all of three days later. My "riding season" is all year round, but things do get a lot more intense between May and October.
     
  12. FJ111200

    FJ111200 Active Member

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    Today i re-fitted some standard forks to my XJR which i had powder coated and removed the fashion victim USD's.
    xjr original forks.jpg
     
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  13. Brhatweed

    Brhatweed Well-Known Member

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    I'm really diggin' that XJR1200. That big boy would look great next to my SECA 750.

    I'm somewhat familiar with northern Illinois weather having worked for Motorola at Schaumberg for various training and other duties. Some days were hot and other days not but the wind was a constant. Was a good gig until Google screwed it up and cut the company in half.
     
    Last edited: Mar 17, 2026
  14. blackhawk7188

    blackhawk7188 New Member

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    Took out the 1982 XJ750 after working on it over the winter. Went to lunch with my dad, he has a 2003 Vstar 1100. Was a good day to get the bikes out to stretch their legs.

    upload_2026-3-21_22-38-41.jpeg
     
  15. Brhatweed

    Brhatweed Well-Known Member

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    Wow! Very nice SECA
     
  16. Brhatweed

    Brhatweed Well-Known Member

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    Put some miles on the bike today bring it to just under 100 away from the magic 50,000 point. Runs great but seems to have an intermittent miss that feels like a coil is briefly dropping out so I will be addressing the connectors in the coming days.
     
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  17. RideAlong420

    RideAlong420 Member

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    I love those OEM control units, much nicer and cleaner than the ones on my 1982 XJ650. Never understood a three post killswitch when you could just do on/off

    Also tell me about those grips? They're beautiful
     
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  18. Wolverine68

    Wolverine68 New Member

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    Thanks. Not sure where the grips came from. They were on the bike when I bought it.
     
  19. StorminNorman

    StorminNorman Member

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    Almost done with the handlebar swap. Picked up a shorter clutch cable, and will fit that tomorrow. New pro grips are nice and comfy compared to the ones I took off.
     
  20. Olewildbill

    Olewildbill New Member

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    Tank cleaning round two.. perhaps someone noted it somewhere i missed.. but it turns out it is more important to get vinegar neutralized and tank protected than it is to shake out nuts and bolts.. had to do it a second time cause i was so focused on getting agitators out the tank flash rusted on me..
     

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  21. ScottFree

    ScottFree Active Member

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    What did I do to my Yamaha today? Well, I didn't push it off a cliff or call the Click & Clack Donation Hotline (yet). That's something, given what a frustrating day it was.

    The sun came out and the temperature went up to a balmy 55º, but instead of riding one of my running motorcycles I decided to make some progress on the 650's carbs, the ones that have had this overflowing problem that at times seems to have come from a bit of rubber stuck in the float valve and other times seems inexplicable. Last fall I pulled the rack to clean things out, then moved on to taking the rack apart and going through the carbs. Today was the day to put things back together.

    But first... I went through all four, polishing the float tangs with my Dremel tool and slightly bending the stops that restrict how far the floats can drop when the carb is empty. Then... back together, time to set fuel levels. I did this one at a time since I had them apart and it's a lot easier to drain one carb than four every time I need to bend a tang a tiny bit. I came up with this high-tech fixture:

    IMG_8112.JPG

    This is the pesky #2 carb, which had been overflowing before I split the rack apart. Notice the level to assure things are straight.

    Fuel level check:

    IMG_8116.JPG

    Parallax makes it hard to photograph things well, but the when I sat with my eyes at the level of the carb and sighted down the edge of the bowl, I got them all into the 3+/-1 mm range. Each carb got checked twice to confirm no overflowing. So far, so good.

    I put the rack together, using a piece of plate glass I keep around especially for this task. Then it was time to put the rack onto the bike. I set the airbox boots in the sun to let them get nice and flexible (that 46-year-old rubber is still surprisingly supple) and greased them up with a bit of No-Mar tire mounting lube, so the neighbors were exposed to a minimum of handy expletives.

    Install the tank, turn the tap to "prime," and... dribble dribble dribble. Gas pouring down around #1 again. WTF? I checked that carburetor at least twice and maybe three times, and there it is dribbling gas. At that point I shoved the bike back into the garage (after turning the gas back off) and called it a day. The alternative, as I said, is to push it off the end of the pier or call the donation hotline.

    I am in a very unhappy place with this bike right now. It makes no sense that the float valves would stop working as soon as I assembled the rack. I am having flashbacks to other old vehicle fiascos, in particular a British sports car that I got cheap, got going pretty well, and which then rewarded me by having everything start failing. I feel like I have spent too much money (when I stopped keeping track in the fall of 2024, I had put over two grand into this "free" motorcycle, though about $400 of that was just to get it titled by the State of Ill-Annoy) and way too much time on this bike, and been rewarded with relatively little actual use (about 4000 miles). Sigh. I am on the verge of trying to cut my loss by listing the thing on FB Marketplace as "runs but pours gas on the ground."

    There is one more possibility I intend to check tomorrow: I noticed the carb-to-carb fuel connectors turned really, really easily, and I wonder if the o-rings on them have given up the ghost and are leaking. I figure that I can do an approximate fuel level check tomorrow to see if the carbs in fact are not overflowing but gas it dribbling from the fuel lines. While it looks like they're overflowing, gas moves in mysterious ways on metal surfaces. It is a thing I can check without too much work. Of course, if the o-rings are shot, then the rack has to come off and come apart... again...
     

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