jayp13601
New member
- Joined
- Mar 15, 2004
- Messages
- 3
it idles just fine , but on the stand i can only get about 6 grand out of it, just wont seem to come into it. if im on it it will go for a little bit then bog out if i let off it will idle again, untill you sit for a min then it'll go a little more. if i stay on it it will just quit .tried cranck seals.seems to be gettin enough fuel.this does have a pipe , clutch, filters and bender racing did modify and tune it while the previous owner had it.but it did sit for a couple years .one time for about 5 min i actually got to ride it
SX700RNY
New member
carb tuning
My wife had an 87 exciter, that after getting it "tuned up", the needle jets were clipped in the wrong position, and the sled road good for a few miles and after it warmed up, it would bog down and not have any power. After adjusting the needle jets position, it ran like it had before the "tune up."
My wife had an 87 exciter, that after getting it "tuned up", the needle jets were clipped in the wrong position, and the sled road good for a few miles and after it warmed up, it would bog down and not have any power. After adjusting the needle jets position, it ran like it had before the "tune up."
red devil
New member






red devil
New member


LazyBastard
New member
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2004
- Messages
- 3
They didn't have problems with pistons, they had problems with carbs. The first problem with the original butterfly carbs was a finnicky-starting issue - you had to pull the choke, then pull the string until it kicked ONCE (one pull), then drop the choke to nothing and pull twice more. Due to customer complaints, the carbs were updated to round-slides - this introduced an even WORSE problem... at certain RPMs, the round-slide carbs would resonate and cause the gas in the bowls to cold-boil - this caused an increase in the bowl pressure, which prevented new gas from being pumped in, and caused the jets to suck on bubbles, causing severe lean condition which would burn the pistons.
I have an '87 Exciter that I've owned for 7 years. I think its got about 50000 miles on it, of which I put on about 15000. I've had to rebuild the top end ONCE, due to one of the pistons wearing way beyond its limit and snagging on an exhaust port on a down stroke. Other than the damage caused by that, both pistons were in PERFECT condition. In the last couple of years, its become my "sleeper", having been replaced by RX1
.
So my advise to anyone with an 87-90 Exciter.... if its got round-slides, chuck-em and put on a pair of Mikuni B38-34's (which happen to be the same carbs as current model VK540 uses).
I have an '87 Exciter that I've owned for 7 years. I think its got about 50000 miles on it, of which I put on about 15000. I've had to rebuild the top end ONCE, due to one of the pistons wearing way beyond its limit and snagging on an exhaust port on a down stroke. Other than the damage caused by that, both pistons were in PERFECT condition. In the last couple of years, its become my "sleeper", having been replaced by RX1

So my advise to anyone with an 87-90 Exciter.... if its got round-slides, chuck-em and put on a pair of Mikuni B38-34's (which happen to be the same carbs as current model VK540 uses).
Phazer
New member
Not to hijack this post or anything but....I was always courious about why Yamaha used the butterflys on only the Phazers? That was why I always assumed that Phazers started so easy. Besides normal cleanings, I've never had a lick of problems with the carbs. Question #2, why doesn't Yamaha use a rack mount on the Exciters like they do a Phazer? Just wondering.... 

LazyBastard
New member
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2004
- Messages
- 3
To answer question 1: they all seem to start easy, except for 87 Exciter. The type of carbs are not nearly as important as the compatibility with the engine.
2: Exciter *did* have rack-mount carbs. When it still had butterfly valves. Slide carbs don't like to be hooked up in a rack since there is nothing turning between them--- they both need cables to pull straight up.
2: Exciter *did* have rack-mount carbs. When it still had butterfly valves. Slide carbs don't like to be hooked up in a rack since there is nothing turning between them--- they both need cables to pull straight up.
red devil
New member



jayp13601
New member
- Joined
- Mar 15, 2004
- Messages
- 3
me again
i think ive got it down to the carbs, there was 390 main jets in these things which seemed a bit big to me .so im trying 330 and 340 which seem to make it much better but its still not just pulling on the top end not much power after about 6 grand . could any one tell me how there carbs are set up . this is piped , ported, polished. or ill just have to try messin ,but it s really to warm now , idont know .
i think ive got it down to the carbs, there was 390 main jets in these things which seemed a bit big to me .so im trying 330 and 340 which seem to make it much better but its still not just pulling on the top end not much power after about 6 grand . could any one tell me how there carbs are set up . this is piped , ported, polished. or ill just have to try messin ,but it s really to warm now , idont know .
red devil
New member
