Ok, I have been trying to solve this problem on my 400 for quite some time. So here are the particulars
It's a 1992 Bandit 400 with 25K kilometers on it.
The engine was just torn down, and the cam chain replaced, while I did that, I set the valves, so they are correct.
I cleaned up the carbs while I had them off, but I basically left them attached to the rails and just pulled the bowls and bellows caps off. All
the vacuum tap o-rings are accounted for. Carbs were synced after the engine was put back in. I checked the petcock and vacuum hose with a
vacuum gun and it holds vacuum no problem.
The carbs/bike is bone stock. No performance upgrades or carb additions at all. I have the A/F mixture screws set to 1.5 turns out.
The symptoms...
When the bike is cold, it runs beautifully. Pulls really strong, no hesitation, but the idle will hang a little at 2K rpm
As the bike warms up, the idle becomes more erratic. It starts to hunt. The bike will be really slow to return to idle and hang at 2.5-3K for
many seconds. If I go out and ride, I will lose a cylinder fairly rapidly. Sometimes it will come back, but usually only if I hold the throttle
wide open, and let the revs climb above 8K.
If I richen up the A/F mixture screws, the hunting is not as bad. If I pull the sparkplugs, 1,2,3 are whitish, and 4 is black. When I drained
the carbs, #4 had almost no fuel in it at all.
I have used every method in the book to find a vacuum leak between the carbs and the engine block. WD40, water, carb cleaner, even smoke.
Ok now for the weird part. I removed the airbox to expose the carbs. With the bike running at idle, I place my thumb over the pilot air holes
at the mouth of the carb starting with 1. For each carb, 1,2,3 the bike idle will drop off and the bike will almost stall. When I get to number
4, and place my thumb over the pilot holes of this carb only, the idle rises to 2-3K, and will stay there more or less.
I tried squirting WD40 on the seals that join the fuel rail together, it might have been my imagination, but it seemed to dampen the effect of
placing my thumb on the pilot air holes. Is it possible that an air leak at this location could cause this problem? I mean, it's full of fuel
right? There shouldn't be any vacuum at this location. The other thing I was thinking was a stuck float. If there was no fuel in the bowl,
could that cause these symptoms too? Certainly the cylinder not firing, but the rest of it as well?
Any advice or help is much appreciated, I am pretty close to dropping some dynamite in the tank and wishing it a fond fairwell.
ED