mmaun...@gmail.com wrote:
> By Vacuum slide do you mean the diaphram assembly in the center of
the
> carb that slides up and down according to the level of vacuum in the
> carb? Here's a diagram of my carb - Are you referring to number 11?
> http://www.sr250.com/images/service_man/4-01.jpg
Yes, number 11 is the vacuum slide which has the rubber diaphragm
attached. You want that vacuum slide to move freely so it doesn't tear
the rubber diaphragm. Honda will charge you a lot of money for a new
assembly...
Number 12 is the pilot air jet. It probably won't get plugged up, I'm
just pointing it out for reference. Almost straight down on that
drawing you can see a tubular section of casting in the carburetor
body. If you look down on it, you will probably see that it looks like
there's a plug in that hole.
Since the drawing doesn't show the idle mixture screw and its
accompanying spring, washer and rubber o-ring, it's probably right
there under that plug. The plug is supposed to keep owners from
"tampering" with the idle mixture. Shop mechanics will refuse to touch
it, saying they will get fined for messing with it.
But, many knowledgeable tuners have been drilling that plug out for the
last 25 years so they can get to the idle mixture screw, clean that
hole and adjust the idle fuel air mixture.
First, a small pilot hole is drilled in the plug. Then a small sheet
metal screw is screwed into the plug. Pulling on the screw with a pair
of pliers removes the plug.
Then the tuner can slowly *tighten* that idle mixture screw, counting
the number of turns until the idle screw just bottoms out. The idle
mixture screw can then be removed, taking care to save the spring,
washer and tiny rubber o-ring if there is one in the hole.
Then the tuner can squirt aerosol carburetor cleaner down the hole and
the spray will come out the pilot air jet, the idle jet, and the idle
by pass holes down stream of the throttle butterfly.
If you squirt through the idle mixture screw hole with your finger over
the three idle mixture discharge ports downstream of the throttle
butterfly, the aerosol cleaner will have to go out through the pilot
air jet and out through the idle set, cleaning out the tiny idle
mixture passages.
The spring, washer and o-ring are reinstalled on the idle mixture screw
and it is threaded back into the hole until it bottoms lightly. Then
the tuner screws the idle mixture screw back out the exact same number
of turns he screwed it in when he was counting turns. So the idle
mixture setting is back to what it was from the factory.
When you start the engine up, warm it up and then open the throttle
rapidly and close it rapidly. If the idle RPM settles back down to the
normal speed, you're done with that screw. But, if the RPM stays high
for several seconds after you close the throttle, the idle fuel air
mixture is too rich or the idle speed is too high. Turn the idle speed
screw down first, then try the mixture strength test again. If the idle
speed still hangs up too high, turn the screw 1/8th of a turn clockwise
and repeat the idle mixture test, adjusting the idle speed screw and
the
idle mixture screw until you get the fastest smooth idle for the smount
of throttle opening as determined by the idle speed screw.
Good luck on cleaning and adjusting your carburetor.