Echofan wrote:For anyone working on the RB-K75. There is a brass throttle cable assembly piece threaded into the carb. If this is threaded in too far, the bore in the rotor will not fully open. Because this had been "played with" before I got it, I was not sure if there was supposed to be a nut on this brass assembly or not.
Yes they typically have a lock nut to lock the adjustment in place.
Initially I had the carb mounted, and then worked with this piece and the throttle cable.
While the carb is off the unit you should install this brass sleeve to the carb body, and check that upon WOT the full bore of the rotor lines up with the bore of the carb.
Also make sure it is not adjusted out too far - with idle stop screw threaded out so it is not touching the throttle rotor there should be a couple mm of slack in the throttle cable , then turn in the idle stop til it just touches, initial adjustment is 2-1/2 to 3 turns in from that point, usually then adjust for proper idle speed (without a tach, at least it should idle steady without engaging clutch)
Appears to start in 2-3 pulls, which isn't bad since it has been used, and I'm not sure what oil mix was used previously.
2 pulls is excellent - prime, choke, pull once , it fires once, take off choke, and fires up at idle and idles smooth - if it starts that way, it's good as a new one.
I'm a fan of high quality oils because I've had some equipment apart that's been run way too rich on ashy oil and seen the results. Unfortunately many of my family still buy the cheapest oil mix they can find at the dollar store.
Good quality mix oil is not that expensive - even synthetic Dolmar mix oil we sell over the counter is under 2 bucks for a 1 Gal mix bottle
Thanks again-- I spent way to much time on this hoping it was a mixture screw, rather than checking the needle lever... Take it off and check the lever for a loading condition! Lesson learned.
Glad you got it going!
How poor are they who have not patience. What wound did ever heal, but by degrees? - Iago (Othello Act II, Scene 3)