jvc Posted March 11, 2011 Report Posted March 11, 2011 hi guy just bought a banshee 2 month ago and all run realy realy great!!! i have t5,k&n filter,v force and stock carb.The dealer where i bought the bike as jet the bike for winter,around -15 celcius.At this temperature the bike runn realy good but am going up north this weekend and the temperature start to get warm,like 0 to 5 celcius.So as you will know the bike will run a little rich and am wondering what i can do to get it a little bit leaner without changing jet??Can i try to adjust it with the air screw? The problem is that i dont know what jet are currently using but am pretty sure i run 300 main but i dont want to start playing in it this week because all run great...so what i can do to my bike to get it running good for my weekend! -Elevation: 700ft -stock airbox! Quote
Larry's Shee Posted March 12, 2011 Report Posted March 12, 2011 Welcome to BHQ !! First thing to buy for it is a Clymers repair manual. If you're new to two stroke tuning , it's best to be conservative on jetting. Spark plugs are cheaper than pistons. Are you sure they jetted for winter? If it runs good now unless it warms up a lot you should be good. If it starts to burble on top end, you could remove snorkle from air box, or if you have anything other than stock filter you coul take lid off. DO NOT do either of these UNLESS it starts burbleing. Safest thing to do is list ALL of your mods , elevation or location , temperature, and jets/settings of carb. Someone is bound to help you. Where are you from? You should be good for the weekend, just take an extra set of plugs with you. Quote
jvc Posted March 13, 2011 Author Report Posted March 13, 2011 thx for the help! just came back from my weekend,was about 10degrees and the bike was burbleing a lot.So i just change my plug for some more summer plug and the bike was running fine but not as much if the weather where cold! Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.