First thing I'd like to say is, I'm new, so please be gentle. Â

Second thing is - I hate seeing "What's wrong with my bike" threads with no information, so this will probably read like an essay.
I bought my first airhead, an '84 R65LS about a week ago from a fella who assured me it would ride daily, himself experiencing no major faults with its operation. I have indeed been riding it daily since then, loving it, but have just recently discovered that it has a tendency to cut out at seemingly random moments (These moments range from pulling up to a stop sign to navigating a corner at 80kph). Not only is this more than a little dangerous, but I'm worried it might be doing permanent damage to the operation of my new treasure.
So I did as any 22 year-old, relatively mechanically incompetent motorcycle owner does in these situations and Googled it. Much to my chagrin, I found a thread posted on another website about this
exact problem, by the
previous owner of this particular bike.
http://www.advrider.com/forums/showthread.php?t=878965So I'll be giving him a ring tomorrow to ask for the end of
that story. Hard feelings aside for the moment, I'm not completely convinced his diagnosis of it being an electrical problem is correct.
I think I'll be the one trying to fix this either way, so I pose all the information I can think of about the problem to you helpful souls, in convenient dash-points, in the hopes that someone might have experienced something similar:
- Happens more frequently when engine is cold, when fully hot problem doesn't seem to occur. I cannot replicate the problem by riding within any particular RPM range.
- In third gear at about 3500rpm, the exhaust has backfired and bike began to lose power and surge (with throttle held steady) before cutting out completely (OIL & GEN lights illuminated, head & taillights still working)
- Gearing down while approaching stop sign, throttle disengaged, as clutch is disengaged (level pulled) and RPM drops, instead of stopping at idle, just seemed to drop out the bottom of the tachometer, engine failed and would not restart, rolling to a very quiet stop.
- Engine will then turn over but not start. So far, waiting ~10mins seems to allow the bike to restart and run. Quote from PO's thread: "sometimes it will restart after a few minutes and other times will flatten the battery trying to start". Thankfully have not yet experienced this.
[ETA - I have read this can be a symptom of electrical overheating, though if it was, I would expect it to get worse as the engine heats up, and thus be easily replicated by riding with high RPM. Correct me if I'm wrong!]
Is anyone still reading? Thanks. Â

So since then I've read an airhead proverb that goes "If you think the problem is in the carburetor, check the electrics; If you think it's the electrics, it's probably the carburetor", and I'm inclined to agree, or at least not commit to one or the other. The previous owner seemed fairly convinced that the problem was electrical - inspecting the coil for cracks (which I intend to do with my own eyes) and installing a new battery - Â but the loud backfire in particular suggests to me that it could be a problem with the carburetion.
I've been soaking in suggestions since the problem first appeared while away from home, ensuring the right spark plugs are attached, checking (or just replacing) the ignition coil, checking the mixture and condition of the bike's oil, checking the throttle cable for stress or inconsistency, making sure the carbs are synced...
But it's 12:45, the neighbours are asleep and I've just gotten home from work, so I have yet to even check the spark plugs let alone fire her up. I have the day off tomorrow so I'll be spending the day in the garage methinks. If I could glean any pearls of wisdom from my cadre while looking it over I would be ever so grateful, as I mentioned I am not mechanically minded and am pretty new to the airhead game, but am a quick learner and pretty excited to get my new baby back on her A-game.
Thank you all for your time and attention, hope to hear from any of you soon! Â
