ThumperPaul
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SuzukiSavage.com Rocks!
Posts: 2156
Houston, Texas
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I recently purchased a 2004 Savage with about 7,400 miles. It's stock except for a Jardine Rumblers series slash cut slip on (currently no baffle, but considering one). I have read the many posts on carb jetting and narrowing the needle spacer (washer, shim). I greatly appreciate all the experience and tested fixes! Thank you! Here comes my specific question.
I'm in Houston, TX. It's hot, humid, and virtually at sea level. The bike starts and idles well and generally runs well (slight dead spot in the low/mid range especially when the bike hasn't warmed up, but noticeable otherwise too). I am however getting some gnarly backfire on deceleration - not just a nice popping and crackling - but some kaboom style. I have removed the plug over the air/fuel mix screw (prior owner never even tinkered with it after installing the Jardine). It was 3 turns out as stock indicated. With the bike hot, max idle RPM is actually at about 2.25 turns out, with no significant drop in RPM to 3.0 turns out. Even at 3.5 turns out, still not much of a drop.
Based on my reading on the issue, here's what I'm thinking to do to tune the carb and get rid of the kaboom.
1) Go to 1/2 spacer on the needle. Should I go any thinner? 2) Go from 52.5 to 55 pilot jet. I'm really questioning myself here since max RPM is achieved at 2.25 turns out. If I go with the bigger jet, will it be too much? Will I be able to lean it out to max RPM with #55? Will it only be 0.25 turns out or worse none (not optimized)? 3) Go from 145 to 150 main jet. I'm thinking this is ok, but I don't want to give up mid-range snap and responsiveness. Thoughts.
Note: I'm an older rider (60ish). WOT is a blast, but I rarely ride that way anymore. In my younger days, I would have been tuning all day to maximize WOT. Nice clean, crisp acceleration with no kabooming backfire on deceleration is my main goal.
Will thinning the needle spacer achieve most of what I'm wanting to do? I don't mind occasionally working on a carb, but I'd rather be riding than hold my carb in my hand.
Thanks in advance!
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