Welcome
- Check your spark plugs, what colour are they, do they look worn, were any of them loose? if any were loose check said plug will nip up and then take a further a 1/8 turn - if any keep turning then that's a whole world of aggro. But its very very rare for this to happen, unless the previous owner was mechanically a complete cock.
- Check you plug caps for cracks and splits, replace if found.
- Check the HT leads aren't loose in said plug caps, if so trim the end and re-insert leads into caps with a twisting motion - don't be too aggressive, you will start to feel resistance to the twisting progressively getting tighter (5turns or so works in most cases)
- Check all the vacuum spigot caps for cracks or looseness (little black caps 1/2" long sit on the inlets between the carbs and the engine.
- Check the 9" vacuum tube that goes from no.4 carb(far r/h side) to the under side of the tank for looseness or cracks etc.
- if the previous owner has been a tinkerer they make have played aropund with the mixtures screws and also the carbs might need balancing.
- If all of the above is correct as per the manual, it cant hurt to pop down to your local dealer and get the compression checked.
- With the bike on the stand and in neutral, does the bike idle and then rise through the revs smoothly?
- when you turn the ignition on does the rev counter move around the dial? yes means there is an issue with the exup vale/servo - 5k rpm indicates the exup valve isn't moving freely and needs servicing, 10k rpm means the TPS (throttle position sensor has been fiddle with and needs it position resetting)
- with the ignition on start the bike let it run for a second or so then hit the kill switch - you should hear a servo noise that lasts for about a second from under the front/left hand side of the petrol tank - this means the servo motor is working.
- To service the exup valve, put the bike on the center stand and lay down next to the l/h side of the bike and you will see a silver/chrome cover on the side of the exhaust system, just behind the side stand.
- Remove the 8mm bolts that hold the cover one (but be gentle as these can seize, if tight apple penetrating fluid and leave over night)
- behind that cover is the exup valve cover plate, which is also held in place but 3 more bolts (but in this case be even more careful because if you snap one of these its a trip to bike should to have them drilled out and re-threaded or helicoiled.
- once you get the exup out, check it for straightness - east way to do this at home is to put one end in a variable speed hand drill and slowly spin the vale - any out of true will be immediately obvious.
- If the vale is out of true then with the vale still in the drill chuck, gently tap it with a rubber mallet and check for true - rinse and repeat. Then put the opposite end of the vale in the drill check and check for true again etc.
- Then lastly put some copper grease on the valve ends and cover plate before re-assembly. Also don't forget to put the small 5mm spacer on the end of the valve that goes into the exhaust headers (people either forget or loose this, not the end of the world - but you end up with a rattly exup vale)
- And lastly on the subject of those 6x bolts - its recomnended you replace these with stainless or titanium so you never have to worry about seizing/snapping.