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Taotao 125cc pit bike wont start
I have the above bike and it will not start. It has a kick start FYI so it has no battery. I have drained gas, cleaned carb and still wont start. It will crank for a second when I add starter fluid to it but dies quickly there after. I am not sure what else to try. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
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Is this with our without choke
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It will not start with the choke on or off.
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Blow air through fuel lines. Clogged passage in carb.
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Did you open the float bowl drain screw to see if gas is getting to the carb? It could possibly be a stuck-closed float needle, and the bowl isn't filling up with gas.
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I take it that your carb float bowl is riveted shut? Making it impossible to access the pilot and main jets. I'm betting there is a clogged pilot jet, preventing fuel pickup at startup.
If it isn't too much of a PITA, can you post some pics of the carb you have, so we can see what you're dealing with? |
I have attached some pictures. I had to take it off to take these and it had gas in the bowl. When I turned it upside down to see if gas would come out of the main jet nothing came out. Not sure if this is normal or not but it did flow out of the main gas line hole and a hole at the top of the carb which seems like a vent hole in the carb. I circled it on the pic.
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Unfortunately, since you can't access the float or float needle, pilot jet, main jet, or even the air/fuel mixture screw, my suggestion would be to get a comparable carb that you can actually fine-tune and dial in, like THIS ONE. It uses Mikuni Jets and has a removable float bowl and access to the air/fuel screw. If you just want the carb alone, you can find that right HERE
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When the carb is turned upside down, the main jet is then at the very top, very little if any gas will backflow through the hole in the carb throat. The circled part is indeed a bowl vent, to equalize the pressure in the bowl, and will spill gas out when you tip it sideways.
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And also BTW having kick start does not necessarily mean no battery. |
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Yep, the main jet in the center is visibly clogged, the best way to remove it is to first slide the pin that is holding the white plastic float out, and carefully lift the float straight up. If it resists, the float needle underneath may be stuck in the seat. If the float and needle come out, carefully set them down so the needle doesn't slide off the tang of the float. Then use an 8mm (usually) box wrench to undo the hex portion under the main jet and thread that out. The next step is to use a small straightslot to remove the pilot jet, which is to the right of the main jet in your pic. Once you have removed both of them, you now have to clean them, not an easy task, as it looks pretty crusty on the main jet. Soaking the jets in carb or contact cleaner is a start, and may take a while. Ideally, the jets will have size numbers on them, but not likely. Some people poke a very small guitar string or piece of wire brush wire to clear the jets, I'm not a big fan of doing that.
The bottom part of the main jet is called the emulsion tube, and you'll see some holes drilled into the sides of that, sometimes they get clogged and need to be cleaned also. Once you clean the face of the main jet, you can separate it from the emulsion tube with a straightslot, to clean it better. Spraying carb or contact cleaner in all the openings of the carb body, followed with blowing them out with compressed air may clear them out. The best solution would be removing the air/fuel screw and idle screw and having the carb and all parts cleaned in an ultrasonic dip tank. Short of that, maybe you'll get lucky and be able to get it to work for you. |
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