- Joined
- Mar 25, 2023
- Messages
- 36
I recently discovered that the timing marks on my primary cover were off by 7.5 degrees. After retiming my ignition (Boyer MKIII black box) I thought I was out of the woods but I am still having problems. After two 1 hour rides, I intermittently experienced a few backfires and an occasional misfire. If I had to give a frequency, I would say there were about a dozen or so of these events during each of my one hour legs. There did not seem to be anything unique about the circumstances around these events, and usually it was only a pop or two that quickly smoothed out.
Upon advice received elsewhere, I bypassed my key switch and kill switch by running a wire from the negative terminal of the battery to the Boyer with a toggle switch to turn it off and on. I started the bike but it was popping and backfiring. I rode it around the block and it bucked and misfired somewhat regularly.
What I have done:
-New Amal Premiers (not an expert but am confident they are set up correctly, I.e., no swarf or detritus in bowls; #19 pilot jets clean and turned all the way in; air mixture screws adjusted from baseline 1 1/2 turns; slides synced; new gaskets and insulators, manifold connections not overtightened; no air leaks)
-New battery is strong
-New capacitor
-New plugs
-Tested coils and numbers reported on the forum were not thought to be out of bounds
-Valve clearances are correct
-Checked Boyer wiring to coils and checked ground
-Checked and confirmed ground from battery to frame
-Timing is correct and is set at 30 degrees fully advanced (revved up past 5000 rpms)
I think it has to be electrical with the symptoms I described. And I think after bypassing the key and kill switch, the Boyer is the number one suspect. I am happy to look elsewhere, but I don’t have any other ideas of where to look.
It’s a ‘73 Roadster. The bike is candy apple red if that makes any difference.
Thank you.
Upon advice received elsewhere, I bypassed my key switch and kill switch by running a wire from the negative terminal of the battery to the Boyer with a toggle switch to turn it off and on. I started the bike but it was popping and backfiring. I rode it around the block and it bucked and misfired somewhat regularly.
What I have done:
-New Amal Premiers (not an expert but am confident they are set up correctly, I.e., no swarf or detritus in bowls; #19 pilot jets clean and turned all the way in; air mixture screws adjusted from baseline 1 1/2 turns; slides synced; new gaskets and insulators, manifold connections not overtightened; no air leaks)
-New battery is strong
-New capacitor
-New plugs
-Tested coils and numbers reported on the forum were not thought to be out of bounds
-Valve clearances are correct
-Checked Boyer wiring to coils and checked ground
-Checked and confirmed ground from battery to frame
-Timing is correct and is set at 30 degrees fully advanced (revved up past 5000 rpms)
I think it has to be electrical with the symptoms I described. And I think after bypassing the key and kill switch, the Boyer is the number one suspect. I am happy to look elsewhere, but I don’t have any other ideas of where to look.
It’s a ‘73 Roadster. The bike is candy apple red if that makes any difference.
Thank you.