I certainly didn't know this. I found this chart in my Suzuki printed manual.. This is telling me that once the pump arm reaches 14.3 degrees, the amount of oil going to the cranlshaft remains a constant. Anything past that does not increase the flow to the crank. It certainy does for the cylinders, but not the crank.
So from this I assume that holding the lever full open to expedite air bubble removal at start up is pretty much a waste of time as far as the lines feeding the crank. I had no idea that the flow to the crank was a constant. Did you?
I was born with nothing and still have most of it left.
I forgot this came from a 550 manual. Odd manual. Printed by Suzuki, it covers the GT550J only. I say that because it has all the info on the twin leading shoe front brake. Zero mention of a disk brake that we all know started with the K model in 73.
I was born with nothing and still have most of it left.
Nice to know. Did not know that. Here's another one. Did you know that the late model 550 and I'm assuming the 380 carbs have an adjustable governor on them ?
Look directly behind the cable pulley on the vertical wall. There's a phillip screw with a loaded spring roughly 20-30 mm long. The further you screw it out. The pulley is restricted from obtaining a full throttle. It's the only explanation I can see for that odd screw.
Coyote wrote:I forgot this came from a 550 manual. Odd manual. Printed by Suzuki, it covers the GT550J only. I say that because it has all the info on the twin leading shoe front brake. Zero mention of a disk brake that we all know started with the K model in 73.
The GT750 manual only covers the engine for the J/K. All other references are in service bulletins and addendums.
Lane
If you stroke it more than twice; you're playing with it.
Too many bikes, too much time, ENOUGH SPACE, FINALLY! Never enough money.........
Coyote wrote:I forgot this came from a 550 manual. Odd manual. Printed by Suzuki, it covers the GT550J only. I say that because it has all the info on the twin leading shoe front brake. Zero mention of a disk brake that we all know started with the K model in 73.
K model actually came out in 1972.
I have a GT550 K made in August '72 and sold in the US market with a US VIN plate.
Imported to UK in 2011 (and bought by me), on the road last year and running fine. Still not impressed with the disc brake though - the 4LS was much better.
Pity I can't find who had the bike originally, it would be nice to let them know how it was running.
Think of how stupid the average person is, then realise that half of them are more stupid than that.