I meant to ask him about the choke actually, but completely forgot. Will ask next time I speak to him. I asked him before if it could be anything to do with the airbox, but he said it wasn't that.
Someone suggested to me that it could be a blockage between the feul tank and the carbs, allowing only a certain ammount of fuel to get through, no matter how much the carbs open up because only a little fuel is getting through. I'm not very mechanically minded, as I mentioned, but it sounds to me like this might be a possible explanation. But could this be the case? surely the revs would change even a little bit, if the air intake is increased but the feuling stays the same? I'm not sure.
He has cleaned the carbs twice, and says there is no problem with them, so i think they must be in good working order. he says it also isnt the airbox, valve timing, ignition, or the throttle cable.
So far I have to ask him:
What happens when you use the choke? Do the revs change?
Can you test the charging system? What is the result?
Have you operated the throttle manually? Or just at the grip?
What happens when you turn the idle up/down?
Are the diaphrams that lift the slides in the carbs ripped or do they have holes in them?
I am working all day tomorrow (12pm till 10pm) but might get a chance to phone him on my break.
I just dont understand what the problem is. The bike would rev fine up until the point the engine blew up. I think the engine had been stressed too much and it started making a rattling noise. (this noise matched the revs, so when I revved the engine the rattle sped up to match it. Sounded a bit like a 2 stroke or a chopper or something) Apparantly, one of the valves may have gone. About 2 miles further, doing about 40mph up a hill, in about 4th gear, it started to lose power. I dropped a gear, which I
never had to do for going up hills before. But it carried on losing power, and then the noise changed and sounded a whole lot worse. I thought, "uh-oh, pull over asap." But about 5 seconds later the con-rod succeeded in blasting a hole right through the front of the engine casing, and pouring engine fluid and metal shrapnel into my nice custom belly pan, as well as pouring
loads of smoke out in a huge cloud behind me. Better than any stunt rider doing a burnout, I can tell you that. So, 1 second hand engine later, it will run but it wont rev. You would think the problem would be in the engine, but the mechanic says the engine is fine. He reckons the revving problem must be a seperate problem, but it must have happened at the same time as the engine exploding. Because there was no problem before.
But I'll ask him about everything you guys have mentioned so far, and any other suggestions, and hopefully I will be back on the road soon.
(I love that smiley!)