My excuses for the poor grammar and spelling.
But if I tell my story in Dutch nobody would understand.
Responsibility changes the love for bikes throughout my life.
As student I had a CBR1000RR for track use and a GSX1000R for the daily fun.
When I turned 28 I came to my senses and realized I should have died 50 times already.
I sold the bikes and invested the money in a new hobby: Off-road driving.
Nothing gives more fun than 2 wheels, 1 cylinder and a big forest.
This year I turned 35 and have my own company with 17 employees. Responsibility takes away a lot of fun lately. I cannot afford to get injured to badly. It’s difficult to run a company from the hospital or home so I keep the off-road driving to a minimum nowadays. And when I go off-roading I drive like a 80 years old granny.
So I had to find a new hobby again. But luckily the new hobby found me. Since 2 months I am the proud owner of a CBX 1000 Z from 1979.



But here comes the sad part. My CBX is a bit sick. It has nice stickers with super sport on the gas tank but it does not feel sporty at all. This machine produces more decibels then horse power. If I wanted that I would have bought a Harley. But this is a top of the line super sport made in Japan. Luckily I love to solve mysteries and am pretty handy with tools. Only I do not have any mechanical knowledge on motorcycles with more than one cylinder.
Symptoms: Not enough power and farting in 1 or 2 exhaust pipes. This is clearly a carb problem.
Carburetors are scaring me of with too many tiny parts. I tried once to fix one and had to buy a new one as I lost at least 5 microscopic parts in the process.
So I spent some good Euro’s at a specialist who completely cleaned the carbs and fine-tuned the bike on a roller bank.
I was a bit surprised by the outcome:

53hp. . . . Somewhere the bike lost some 30hp. This CBX is not worthy of the super sport stickers.
Hack, even my Grannies electric wheelchair has more power.
The carbs are as new and tuned, the rubbers between the carbs and engine are replaced with new ones and the K&N air filters are clean and properly oiled.
On the roller bank the carbs worked perfect. Even without any air filters. So it cannot be a lack of vacuum due to the open filters.
So the problem must be in the engine. 30% less power must be a wrong timing on the camshafts. (Obvious) So I removed the camshaft cover and took a look inside.
Timing belt is in good shape

Crankshaft on the right position

The back camshaft is okay

The front camshaft is okay.

Perhaps the power loss is caused due to faulty valves . . . ?
So let’s do a compression test on the cylinders.
I measured the following results:
Cilinder 1 : 166,5psi / 11,45 bar
Cilinder 2 : 139,5psi / 9,6 bar
Cilinder 3 : 169,5psi / 11,65 bar
Cilinder 4 : 160,5psi / 11,05 bar
Cilinder 5 : 167,5psi / 11,5 bar
Cilinder 6 : 168,5psi / 11,6 bar
When I poured some oil in cylinder 2 I got the following reading.
Cilinder 2 : 151,5 psi / 10,4 bar
Perhaps a wee bit low but not low enough to explain the power loss.
I love mechanical problems. You can use a hammer when something is stuck and duct-tape when something should stuck.
If a hammer does not solve the problem it must be an electrical problem. And electrical thingies are plain magic for me.
A pulser or transistor are toys for Harry Potter.
So I bought a magic wand, cast some spells and again no improvement on the power…
Luckily I have a neighbor who does know this stuff and he helped me out.
Timing checked with stroboscopic light and timing was perfect
This thingy looks good:

But looking good and working good are two different things.
How can I check if the thinghy above is working properly?
This is as new:

The ignition unit is replaced with an aftermarket mark Tronics MT-3 module

I replaced the battery
When driving the volt meter is between 13 and 14 volts
All electric cable connections (which I could find) are cleaned and fitted correctly
All fuses (on the handlebar) are okay
The gasoline flow is good as well
The bike has fresh oil and filters
I even checked the rear brake
And still 53hp on the rear wheel.
With the current exhaust it is easy to check which cylinder is giving problems.
The exhaust is made by the former owner (and he also lost the original airbox.)
Each cylinder has its own exhaust and no balance pipe between them.
Cylinder 5 is not working (properly).
But cylinder 2 is working good.
Can a coil give problems to only one cylinder? Or does a broken coil always give problems to both cylinders?
Questions I cannot answer.
So by the end of the week I receive some new dyna coils and all the wiring down to the sparkplugs.

This to avoid the same problem as in this topic: viewtopic.php?f=20&t=6970
If this doesn’t solve the problem I am out of options….
Off course I can bring the bike to a specialist but there is no fun in that.
Does anybody here have any idea what I have forgotten to check?
Bike has only 80.000Km (or roughly 50.000 miles)