Author Topic: Carb Notes  (Read 8123 times)

dan v.

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Carb Notes
« on: November 25, 2018, 03:00:02 PM »
I recently picked up a 04 Bet & Win 250.  It had 258 km on the odo - seriously, it is like new for being almost 15 years old.  Ran poorly, wouldn't come off idle under load.  Figured it needed a good cleaning.

The guy I bought it from knew nothing about the scoots (there was a pair).  He purchased them from someone who had them at their lake home.  I have bought other scoots from similar circumstances - husband/wife bought a pair thinking it would be fun, but one or the other gets scared and the scoots are put away. Usually a very good buy for the person who falls into these type of sales.

So I get home and proceed to commence maintenance - clean carb bowl and jets, and change out all fluids.  Plug is sooty black.

Still runs as bad, stinks, and seems to run very rich.  Remove throttle cables for complete cleaning.  Take thing apart and find spring and washer in mix screw missing, and accelerator pump diaphram is damaged.  Give it all a good soaking in pine sol bath to further clean.

Ok, so now to source parts.   Keihin CVK should be no problem, right?  Not so.  Cannot find these parts aftermarket, and the usual online parts vendors say parts are not available.  Really?  I see the Kymco parts fiche shows the B&W part numbers (all unavailable) are different from the People 250 and Grand Vista, which I ASSUME uses the same carb, and their tiny parts are available.  Would they work on the B&W carb though?

I take the assembled carb to a local, independent bike repair shop.  The owner's son walks by, takes a look at what we were trying to find and gets a carb from a Genuine Buddy 125 from their used parts.  Other than a 24mm throat, it looks like it is the same Keihin  body.  The mix screw pieces and the diaphram looks the same; I end up installing them on my carb.

Reinstall on the B&W, go for test drive.  Scoot comes off idle and accelerates fine, but I have a bad midrange stumble under load or not.  I am stumped.

On another forum I catch a thread about Keihin CVK carb problems on a guy's ATV.  Someone posted a video about the Harley CVK carb, and it points out that quite often the "needle jet" is lost while cleaning.  The "needle jet" is a "sleeve" that fits between the float chamber and the throat, and is held in place by the emulsion tube/mj assy.  When the emulsion tube is removed, this tiny part can fall away undetected.  If it is missing, excess fuel will be introduced into the throat - causing a very rich mixture.

I pull my carb again.  Yep, my needle jet is MIA.  It is easy to tell because it slightly protrudes from the throat where the needle enters the float chamber, and I just had a hole.  Off to the shop, and we pull the needle jet from the Buddy carb and put it in mine.

I install my carb again.  Luckily, it was a decent day for test drive - a sunny day, kinda warm for the day after Thanksgiving.  Scoot seems to run perfect now - put about 20 miles on it.  Pretty sure that is it for riding this season - a half foot of snow is on its way tonight.

Hopefully this is not TLDR.  Carb notes for the Keihin CVK 30 from Bet & Win:

     -The body of the CVK 24 from the Genuine Buddy 125 is mostly the same (no airvalve or TPS).  Looks like the small bits are the   same as with the CVK 30.  Parts are less expensive than thru Kymco.

     -I looks like the same carb is used on the Kymco People 250 and Grand Vista. Need to have this verified, and jetting may be different.

     - Same, or very similar carbs are on the Burgman 250, some Arctic Cat sleds, Kawasaki ATV's, and I'm sure there are others.  Might be a parts source from them.

Plenty of parts avail on the web for Keihin carbs, but hardly anything for the CVK models with the exception of the ones used on HD's.  Would love to see if you have any sources.

05 Super 9, 06 Best & Win, and a fleet of other scoots.....
Grand Rapids, MI

creaseuk

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Re: Carb Notes
« Reply #1 on: August 18, 2020, 05:17:53 PM »
This is a very well written and informative post.  You are correct, i have been searching for a CVK 30mm rebuild kit with no luck. Do you have any pictures of the 'needle jet' you describe?. Also do you have any information on adapting a Harley or any other CVK for Kymco use?

dan v.

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Re: Carb Notes
« Reply #2 on: August 19, 2020, 12:38:14 PM »
This shows it -

As does the parts breakdown in the parts fiche....

Adapting a carb from another model/make bike - you are on your own.   TPS, bystarter, throttle cable mounts, etc will probably be different.

See my post "more carb notes" too.
05 Super 9, 06 Best & Win, and a fleet of other scoots.....
Grand Rapids, MI

Ruffus

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Re: Carb Notes
« Reply #3 on: October 13, 2021, 11:16:44 PM »
@dan v.,
it's a while this post but txs anyway. Followed your hints and could cure my Grand Dink.
Pls see link.
https://www.kymcoforum.com/index.php?topic=31762.0
Happy and safe scootering, Ruffus

CROSSBOLT

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Re: Carb Notes
« Reply #4 on: October 14, 2021, 12:23:57 AM »
Genius, DanV! Pure genius! This is what we all will have to do more of to keep our sleds sliding. Kymco USA will continue to do nothing except to get worse and the hundreds of ships prevented from unloading will make/have made matters worse.
Go, Dan!
Karl

Three motorcycles 1960-1977 (restored a 1955 BSA)
Agility 50
Yager 200i
Downtown 300i
Navy tech, Ships Engineer, pilot and aircraft mechanic

dan v.

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Re: Carb Notes
« Reply #5 on: October 14, 2021, 11:16:40 PM »
Glad it helped someone!  Hadn't been around here for a bit, and thought I would check today.

The B&W has been a bit of a PITA for another issue - hard to start after sitting idle for a few days and dying for no apparent reason.   Would be running fine, and start to stumble and sometimes die, particularly when hot outside.  Figured it was a fuel issue.

Chased around the 'net and found a OEM fuel pump and installed it.  Worked well for a while, and then the hard statring began again. Would fire up, then once fuel was out of the carb bowl, would be hard to fire back up - if it would. 

So about a year after the last vacuum fuel pump replacement, it just crapped out totally.  Bought a fuel pump for a Vespa GT200 and installed it.  Not a perfect fit, but the scoot ran well after install.  I'll see how long it lasts; don't know if ethanol eats them up or what.  Just getting tired of the same issues with an otherwise Very Nice scooter.

05 Super 9, 06 Best & Win, and a fleet of other scoots.....
Grand Rapids, MI

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