The saga just keeps getting weirder.
Earlier today, the shop called me up asking about parts, specifically, how I wanted them shipped. This made no sense to me, since it's being handled under warranty.
Not so fast.
After talking with a Baggy owner (perhaps our own hulagun?) they took apart the fuel system just to double check that everything was fitting correctly. What they found just stumped them. According to the shop, they found a
jet valve inside the fuel line. Someone had actually shoved it up inside there. This drastically reduced the amount of fuel flowing down into the system, which explains why it kept dying. Fuel would (slowly) drip into the engine, pool (in the bowls? engines aren't my thing), and then get used. When this small reservoir was used up, the flow from the tank through the jet valve wasn't enough, and the bike would stall and die.
Next question is why would someone do something like this? The bike is new (25 miles on it when I got it), and never registered. Any service should be under warranty to begin with, and if there was a problem with the bike when it arrived from the importer, it should have been handled at the time. Unfortunately I can't ask the original dealer, because the shop in Denver is bankrupt. (I talked to the former owner, but he got the bike with the shop, which means anyone who would know is two transactions ago. No luck. Keep in mind that SF Moto just received and prepped the bike; they're not on the hook for it.)
Worse, the jet-up-the-fuel-line was probably a really bad fix for some other, as-yet undiscovered problem, which may not be fixable under warranty either if the same genius who shoved the jet into the fuel line did something else at the same time. God only knows what else they'll find in there, but the service manager said they'd found some silicone sealant around the carbs that looked suspicious.
Tomorrow I am going to call MZ and ask them what the hell. I am also going to try to figure out how much money I can spend at this point to get the bike on the road, once SF Moto comes up with an estimate of how much this is all going to cost. SF Moto has also ordered a new gasket, and they're going to examine the carbs and engine more carefully to try to figure out what might have caused something like this in the first place. Presumably if they needed to restrict the fuel flow, the engine was getting too much fuel when it was running, so there's something else that might be wrong in there.
At the moment, I am finding this to be one of those 'if it looks too good to be true' situations. I'm also wishing I'd got a Ninja 500 and thrashed the hell out of that for a while. At this point, it would be costing me less than a new 500 with a functional warranty, no wackiness in the fuel system, and I would have had it two months ago.
The thing that's hacking me off the most is I haven't done more with the Skorpion than sit on it. Once.
